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Vol. 2 Final Edition
Vol. 2 Final Edition
Applying insights and methods from anthropology, biology and philosophy, AURA aims to open up a novel
and truly trans-disciplinary field of research into the Anthropocene. It focuses on the 'co-species
landscapes' that humans and other species come to co-inhabit in the Anthropocene and suggests that a
descriptive and trans-disciplinary approach is needed to understand the kinds of lives that are made and the
futures that are possible in the ruined, re-wilded, and unintended landscapes of the current moment.
AURA is part of the Niels Bohr professorship (between 2013 and 2018) for Anna Tsing. The financial support
from the Danish National Research Foundation for the Niels Bohr professorship is gratefully acknowledged.
Citation:
ISSN 2596-7282
MORE THAN HUMAN
AURA WORKING PAPERS / VOLUME 2
WRECKAGE AND RECOVERY
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ANNA TSING 2
Wreckage and Recovery:
Four Papers Exploring the Nature of Nature
RUNE FLIKKE 15
Smell of Decay, Scent of Progress:
Eucalyptus as a Public Health Actor in Victorian South Africa
KNUT G NUSTAD 55
Beyond purifications:
Exploring Conservation and Its Critique
COVER PHOTO OF CANE TOAD: TROY MCKASKLE / CREATIVE COMMONS CC BY-SA 2.0 LICENSE
2
ANNA TSING
These papers formed part of the December 2013 workshop, “Wreckage and
Recovery: Living with Change.” The workshop, held in Oslo, was a collaborative
effort between the University of Oslo’s program in Technology, Information, and
Knowledge (TIK), its Anthropos and the Material program, and Aarhus University
Research on the Anthropocene (AURA). The call for papers targeted Nordic
anthropologists and science studies scholars and was composed by Tina Talleraas,
Sylvia Lysgård, and their associates at TIK. It includes the following:
Wreckage and recovery, especially when paired up, are two words
that give a number of associations. They resonate with extinction
and survival; pollution and adaptation; demolition and re-building.
Or we start to think about loss and rescue of the existing, human
practices of destruction and innovation. Common for all these pairs
is the connection to the tearing down or building up of something
specific.
We live in times where climate concerns are wide reaching, affecting
the everyday life of people and politics. We use biotechnological
tools to produce new forms of life that challenge understandings of
life and nature as we used to know it. We live with imperial legacies
that continue to produce contested landscapes. We are forced to
confront the complex interlink between devastation of ways of life,
human and non-human, by human activities, as well as their
associations with various forms of technoscience.
These examples illustrate the theme for this workshop, which has
broad empirical grounds connected to either wreckage or recovery,
or both, but with a shared focus on discussing how such issues can
be studied fruitfully with tools from STS and anthropology. We seek
works in progress around questions of:
• how ruining of present conditions (natural, systemic and/or
political) affect us and force us, by necessity or creativity, to deal with
new conditions of living and being human;
• how human interferences leave footprints on land and
climate, where we negotiate, appropriate or oppose these
developments;
By pairing “wreckage” with “recovery,” the workshop set terms that stymied
radical declarations of environmental disaster. Still, I’ll admit that I was surprised
that among the ten papers presented, not one described “wreckage.” A majority of
the papers were ethnographic and historical accounts of efforts at “recovery,” and,
in general, the recovery turned out to be at least as problematic as the wreckage it
aimed to address. A few papers described resource use and extraction, but they
showed negotiation and mitigation, rather than ruin. To the extent this consensus
suggests a “comfort zone” for anthropology and STS, I find it cause for concern. Is
wreckage off limits? I come back to this question at the end of this introduction.
For the moment, my job is to discuss what we offer, not what we miss.
The four papers chosen for this working paper highlight the strengths in the
workshop as a whole: these are sophisticated analyses of how “nature” comes into
being. Rather than setting up a passive backdrop for human activity, the workshop
papers described everyday practices, mobilizations, and contests through which
natural objects emerge, at least tentatively, within world-making projects. One of
the most exciting features of the workshop was its attention to history: the papers
showed changing articulations of nature within shifting winds involving
institutions and individuals, politics and culture, and the nexus of interspecies
arrangements that make particular articulations possible. We were also treated to
some fine examples of the nuanced interaction and alertness to detail that makes
the best ethnography. Our conversation was animated by participants’ willingness
to move back and forth between the tiny particulars that emerged from research
and big questions of theory and method. The four papers here are particularly
beautiful examples of this back-and-forth process. Each offers a careful case study,
and each simultaneously reaches out to urge shifts in conventional thinking about
knowledge, social practice, and how humans inhabit the earth. I take the liberty of
using Latour’s Gifford lectures (2013) as a foil to illuminate these insights.
Latour begins his story with the claims to knowledge of first science and then
religion. These truth claims mirror each other, he argues—and they strategically
ignore the conditions under which each actually produces knowledge. Only when
we accept the partial, contested, and political nature of knowledge can we proceed
beyond the impasses set in our path by science and religion. Then how might we
know the earth? Latour offers two clues. James Lovelock’s Gaia hypothesis shows
us an animate multispecies earth in which humans are not the only historical
actors. The philosophy of Peter Sloterdijk reminds us that human affordances
place us on the surface of the earth, with all the limitations of that position—not
looking down from the sky, as modernist thinkers willed for us. It is from these
clues that Latour assembles his people of Gaia in a war of the worlds that pits them
against modernism’s Humanity and Nature. This war of philosophy, he argues,
might make all the difference for the fate of the earth.
Latour is bold, clear, and provocative. This is an incredible gift. Among other
good things, it means that he can be an excellent foil through which it is possible to
clarify alternative formulations of the problem of nature. The diagrammatic nature
of Latour’s argument provokes alternative diagrams. His clarity, too, provokes
attempts to be clear. In the spirit of these useful provocations, let me offer a
skeleton view of how the papers presented here disagree with the terms of Latour’s
argument. The next section, which introduces the papers, will explain and
illustrate. Here, however, I hope to spark your interest with the starkest outline.
The papers’ alternative course for escaping modernist Nature might be
characterized, against Latour’s formulations, as follows:
(1) Human affordances: Species agilities develop through histories of power
and difference—not universal humanity.
(2) Politics: Mobilization creates articulations across shifting intersectional
positions—not mindless confrontations with aliens.
(3) Language: Words and concepts gain meanings through the struggles in
which they are engaged—not transcendent underlying logics.
(4) Scholarly practice: Scholarship develops in encounter and
collaboration—not towers of anointed men.
I hope I have caught your attention. To hear what these mean, read on.
Rune Flikke has written an extraordinary paper about smell. In the 1870s, in King
William’s Town, South Africa, British settlers planted eucalyptus trees because
they thought the aroma of eucalyptus would counteract the odors of native life,
which, they imagined, carried disease. Flikke shows that medical and
environmental discourses overlapped here, through smell, as earlier settler
interests in tree planting for visual amelioration of the landscape transformed into
social hygiene. The strong smell of eucalyptus made it a tool for colonizing the
landscape, and effective against both its human and nonhuman dangers.
Flikke is explicit in his consideration of smell as a human affordance, that is, a
way that humans contact and join the world. Drawing on Tim Ingold, Flikke writes
(28-29):
As the ground we move on, landscape is one of many surfaces in the
world, where respiration is the very foundation for life that
continuously disturbs a neat distinction between a solid ground and
the more elusive atmosphere … When we walk, breathe, feel the
wind embrace our bodies, the scents of trees, flowers and the sea, we
mingle with- and partake of these aspects of our surroundings …
[T]he olfactory traces of the eucalypts that emanate from the
individual trees extend their presence through the air until they
merge with us through respiration.
And yet Flikke’s analysis offers a sharp break with that of both Ingold and
Latour, who is thinking through Sloterdijk. Both Ingold and Sloterdijk imagine
human affordances as universal, species-defining agilities. Yet smell for Flikke only
makes sense through histories of race, class, and colonization. The smell of
eucalyptus is the smell of hygiene for British settlers; it is a reaction against native
smells, carriers of disease. Flikke even notes that African ontologies may have
helped craft this British sense of smell: South African hunters followed prey
through smell. If, as he states, “the scents that extend through the air… are essential
for our foothold in this world” (31), it is through historical webs of colonization and
the racial categories and settlement patterns they put into place. To inhale “health,”
British settlers had to learn it in opposition to other odors. Colonization and
species agilities made each other. Species agilities develop through histories of
power and difference—not universal humanity.
This makes a difference in our analyses. It is not an ornament on a general
theory; it changes the theory. It allows us to see something completely different
when we look at “the human.” The “people of Gaia” Flikke calls up are fragmented
not—as for Latour—because they line up for-versus-against particular matters of
concern, but rather because they embody difference and inequality from the start,
through the histories that make them. In relation to modernist Humanity, some are
barely human at all, despite their species, and this might block their entry when
joining the Latourian circle. Perhaps it is easiest to appreciate this more deeply in
turning to the question of politics.
WHAT IS POLITICS?
For inspiration on politics, Latour turns to Carl Schmitt, whose idea, as Latour
explains it, is that politics is enmity against the stranger, the other, in one’s midst.
This definition inspires Latour to gird his loins against modernists, whose
definitions of Nature and Humanity he opposes. I defer discussion on this battle
against words to the next section. But here it seems useful to consider: what kind of
politics is this? Certainly it is one in which one must define the enemy in advance of
the battle. It is a politics that precludes repositionings of friend and enemy in the
midst of the conflict.
For a different picture of politics, it is useful to turn to the delightfully rich
ethnography of Jon Nyquist’s paper on the Kimberly Toad Busters, a group of
Western Australians who have gathered to manually dispose of all the cane toads
they find. Cane toads are an introduced species in Australia, and they both poison
native predators and crowd out native competitors. The Toad Busters argue that
they impoverish the biodiversity of the landscapes they come to dominate.
Nyquist’s goal is to listen carefully to what the toad busters say and watch what
they do. He is nervous about letting “context” overwhelm what his informants
show him; he wants the characteristics of the toads to emerge from the Toad
Busters’ action and speech. Latour, I imagine, would approve. Yet Nyquist’s careful
attention to toad busting shows him a politics of shifting characterizations that
continually reshapes the humans as well as the toads. Enmity is unstable, as is
alliance.
Consider what happens when the mainly white Toad Busters begin to work
with aboriginal rangers. Nyquist records an interaction in which a white Toad
Buster interviews an aboriginal ranger, who explains that the toads have imperiled
traditional practices by destroying bushtucker (42-43):
…we grew up hunting, you know, goannas and…old people used to
teach us, but there’s nothing, if the toad is gonna go throughout the
Kimberley, there’s nothing left for our young ones and their young
ones to hunt, and there’s nothing to teach them cause there’s
nothing there […] our kids would forget our culture and how to hunt
and everything….
It is time to return to Latour’s battle over words and concepts. Unwilling to stop at
building a new vocabulary, he wants to go to war against words and concepts he
does not like. But where do words and concepts come from? In Latour’s war, they
are effects of a mode of existence: Nature and Humanity emerge from the
algorithms of modernity. Other understandings of words and concepts are
possible. For example, what if words were tools of the battle rather than the reason
for the battle? Might this not offer a different approach to making peace?
For a glimpse into this kind of language, it is useful to travel to southern Africa,
where “nature” has long been a rhetoric employed by white settlers to displace
black residents from their livelihoods. The term comes with passionate affect for
both advocates and detractors; when tempers are so short, it is hard, at least for me,
to see the situation as one of governing logics. Instead, histories of colonialism and
care, and of alliances made and broken, are continually evoked. “Nature” is a
fighting word.
Knut Nustad takes us there in his passionate evocation of the battle over the
Dukuduku forest. This is not one forest, he explains, but three conflicting ones (67):
In the conflict over which of these three forests will be allowed to flourish,
“nature” is a tool. Advocates for conservation use it to attract their international
allies. Returning evictees instead evoke ancestral homelands. Industrial farmers
appear to ignore all this, perhaps playing on their ability to win by appearing to
stay out of “politics”; the conflict thus becomes reduced to “communities versus
conservation.” Meanwhile, conservationists propose new words, hoping to mobilize
more allies. They speak of “community-based conservation,” or of building a
system of “trade-offs.” However, as Nustad tells us, their mobilizations call to big
players and rarely touch the poor. Nustad stands with the returning evictees, who
see these new words as further cover-ups of bad intentions. New words have
entered the battle, but practical alliances lag behind.
Words in battle can conjure communal sympathies, entrenching differences.
But their use in this fashion also calls attention to the possibility of identity-shifting
alliances. Perhaps Nustad and I disagree on this, but, to me, the solution is not
conversion to a new philosophy, but rather practical alliances in which new
articulations might be made. Articulation, as Stuart Hall argued, is double: linking
and speaking (Hall 1996). Words take on new meanings in the process of politics.
Articulations change who we are. Words and concepts gain meanings through the
struggles in which they are engaged—not transcendent underlying logics.
Hastrup report on their visit to a gold mine in Greenland. Their goal is to learn
about natural resources without too-quickly foreclosing curiosity; they are explicit
in allowing the paper to raise more questions than answers. At the center of their
approach is a method they call “lateral curiosity,” a form of engagement with
informants as interlocutors (85):
Lateral curiosity, then, is not just a matter of being curious
personally, but also of trying to make our collaborators curious
about the world we share and often take for granted and of being
willing to consider alternative ways of living…. Lateral curiosity
nurtures a kind of common ground, collaborative in nature…
Perhaps it is a good thing if this leads to the fall of civilization. Brichet and
Hastrup show us how to work with bushy knowledge. Their approach can be
called feminist, not just because it opens a door for women researchers, but also
because it works against that powerful form of masculinism tied to the imagined
advance of Western civilization. Ontological claims are civilizational claims; their
clarity collapses in the anti-civilizational method of lateral curiosity, which
produces mixed-up fragments. If I follow Brichet and Hastrup, scholars must
scavenge in the ruins of civilization for collaborative knowledge. Indeed, this is
where we might best find the remains of nature.
Taken together, the four papers make important strides in articulating methods for
studying the nature of nature. Two conjunctures seem worth attention before I
turn readers loose. First, the papers by Nyquist and Brichet and Hastrup come
together in refusing to know too much in advance. Nyquist worries that the concept
of “invasive species” assumes too much; Brichet and Hastrup have the same worry
about “natural resources.” In research in which strong conceptualizations have
blocked good description, then, they show us how to learn without carrying too
many presuppositions. I think of this as the method of infinite patience. The job of
the researcher is to work carefully and unobtrusively with informants, letting them
set the terms of the encounter.
The papers by Flikke and Nustad address a different problem: the erasure of
earlier histories in assessments of the present. Conservationists look at a forest and
forget the residents who were evicted. One’s nose experiences a smell without
tracing the associations that inform its pungency. These two papers show us how to
bring histories into the present, infilling the present with the traces of earlier
interactions and events. One might call this the method of historical retracing. The
researcher walks the tracks of the past even in the present.
Each of these methods is a necessary step in watching nature emerge. I
appreciate and learn from them. But let me end with stray worries: Are these
enough for understanding the continuing damage to the livability of our planet?
Might there also be an anthropology of wreckage, and, if so, how would it relate to
the forms of patience and historical retracing we strive to offer?
In asking such questions, Latour’s Gifford lectures return as an ally. One of the
bravest aspects of the lectures, to me, is Latour’s argument that we should live as if
the end of life on earth as we know it was coming. We should not be afraid, he
argues, of accusations of being apocalyptic; instead we should use the apocalypse as
a trope to heighten our awareness. Of course, we should be delighted if our
expectations are proven false. But this hope should not get in the way of describing
terrors. This argument seems to me an important provocation for anthropologists.
My guess is that one of the main reasons anthropologists do not describe
“wreckage” is for fear of being called names—not only apocalyptic, but also
romantic, and, worse yet, stupid. Indeed, anthropologists who make big statements
have often been wrong, and sometimes stupidly, shamefully so. None of us wants to
follow in those footsteps. And yet the fear of being called stupid has stopped our
discipline from saying anything at all about environmental destruction. Ironically,
a discipline that prides itself on its radical stances has become one of the more
conservative disciplines when it comes to ecological wellbeing. We don’t like to say
anything stronger than “Everything is complicated.”
I leave readers then with a challenge. Why are we so afraid of reporting
wreckage? Imagine earlier terrible times, perhaps the Holocaust or slavery. Do we
want to be among those who could only say, “Everything is complicated”? And
what about nonhumans as potential allies? One of the reasons anthropologists get
stuck in giving equal weight to every side of environmental controversies is that we
have been unwilling to make common cause with threatened landscapes of plants
and animals. We report every side of the controversy except theirs. Perhaps it
should be our job, too, to learn something about their livelihood practices and
interspecies relations—as we do for humans. These potential allies might make a
difference in the stands we are willing to take. Infinite patience and historical
retracing would be good guides.
Working papers are an invitation to imagine trajectories-to-come within our
thinking and writing. These four papers help me muddle through my own
scholarly conundrums, even as they set high standards for analysis. I invite readers
to both enjoy these papers and to plunder them, as I have here, to puzzle through
the riddles of our times.
REFERENCES
Brichet, Nathalia and Frida Hastrup. 2014. “Producing gold from a Greenlandic
mountain,” this volume (83-93).
Flikke, Rune. 2014. “Smell of decay, scent of progress: eucalyptus as a public health
actor in Victorian South Africa,” this volume (16-36).
Hall, Stuart. 1996. “On postmodernism and articulation: an interview with Stuart
Hall,” edited by Lawrence Grossberg, In S. Hall, D. Morley, David, and K.-
H.Chen, eds., Stuart Hall: critical dialogues in cultural studies. London:
Routledge, pp. 131-150.
Latour, Bruno. 2013. “Facing Gaia: six lectures on the political theology of nature,”
Gifford Lectures on Natural Religion, Edinburgh, February 18-28.
http://www.bruno-latour.fr/sites/default/files/downloads/GIFFORD-SIX-
LECTURES_1.pdf
Nustad, Knut. 2014. “Beyond purifications: exploring conservation and its critique,”
this volume (61-82).
Nyquist, Jon. 2014. “Ways of contextualizing Cane Toads: invasive species, and
community engagements in the making,” this volume (37-60).
RUNE FLIKKE
In this paper, I will outline a hitherto neglected field of study regarding alien
species in South Africa. By combining work done by historians and geographers on
the aspect of introduced species and landscape alterations in South Africa with
work by medical historians, I intend to show that there is a considerable overlap in
these studies. Two topics regularly surface in work on introduced species in South
Africa, namely the economic rationale and the introduction of trees as landscape
modifiers. By outlining these trends alongside medical discourses I will point out
how tree-planting in general, and the introduction of eucalyptus in particular, was
also pitched as a public health initiative.
To a large extent, the importance of the changes I outlined above is reliant on
the cultural and historical contexts that trees and woodlands are wrapped up in.
With this historical backdrop, I will suggest that eucalyptus trees are social actors
that shape human life-worlds. In order to outline that argument I will rely on
Ingold’s phenomenological approach to “earth and sky” (Ingold 2011), and argue
that it paves the way for a better understanding of the important aspect of the
olfactory presence of eucalyptus trees as active mediators shaping human action
and interaction in public places. Viewed within this theoretical framework, I will
suggest that the importation of eucalyptus gains new significance in the context of
South Africa’s turbulent and oppressive racial history.
Exotic species never travel alone; they are bundled together with other ideas,
experiences and economic conditions such as market access, as well as the
accompanying microorganisms. These bundles will inevitably vary greatly over
time, but are also affected by socioeconomic changes and events such as wars,
conflicts and epidemic threats. Furthermore, the many different ways species travel
will also provide a context that influences human experiences and therefore needs
to be discussed and carefully delineated.
The ethnographic focus will be King William’s Town in the Eastern Cape. I first
traveled to the Amathole Museum in King William’s Town to do some archival
research on the Zionist movement and the uses of soap in healing rituals (Flikke
2003a; 2003b). 1 In conducting my research I discovered that Jeyes Fluid, a popular
detergent used in contemporary healing rituals, which was first imported to King
William’s Town during a sanitation hysteria in the 1870s (Laidler and Gelfand 1971,
p. 362; Flikke 2003a). I did not find much information on Jeyes Fluid, but to my
initial surprise eucalyptus trees entered the narrative in much the same fashion I
had anticipated soaps to do.
Today, King William’s Town can be described as a small sleepy town
approximately a 30-minute drive inland from East London, in the Eastern Cape.
The town was the capital of British Kaffraria from 1847 until 1865, when it was
incorporated into the Cape Colony. When my story starts in the 1870s, it had been a
settlement plagued by decades of unrest and uncertainties. King William’s Town
was located in the midst of prolonged border wars, and was the place where the
first native hospital of South Africa was built. Its physician, J.P. Fitzgerald, was an
English doctor who settled in New Zealand, but who moved to South Africa after
his wife passed away. Among other things, he pioneered hospital architecture,
campaigned for African health and was met with opposition, as he regularly treated
Africans alongside European patients. Additionally, the region became the
birthplace of the African Independent Churches when the first congregation broke
away from the Methodist church in 1874. This occurred 18 years after the prophetic
Xhosa movement, referred to as the Great Cattle Killing of 1856–57 devastated the
same area (Peires 1989). Many decades later, the ANC and the Black Consciousness
movement, which was centered around Steve Biko, who was born in King
William’s Town, surfaced in the same area. In short, it is a small seemingly
1
The Zionist movement is a Christian group usually labeled as part of the African Independent Churches. In
search of their own promised land, Zion, where they can live free from white paternalism, they have broken
with the mission churches.
insignificant town that has played a key role at important junctures in South
African history.
The actors in my story are British settlers and eucalyptus trees. I will start with
the former. Most of the literature on Colonialism, health and Africa focus on the
death and destruction associated with Africa as the “dark continent” and the “white
man’s grave” (Comaroff 1993; Curtin 1989; Feierman and Janzen 1992). As elsewhere
in the colonial outposts, the European settlers in South Africa were preoccupied
with health (e.g. Wood 2005). However, there are important discourses that connect
colonial expansion with improvements in European health. Notaries such as Cecil
Rhodes and Francis Galtung, Darwin’s ambitious younger cousin and the founder
of eugenics, were both venturing to Africa in search of better health (Fancher 1983,
p. 67; Gillham 2001, ch. 3–4). Rhodes was recognized for his sharp mind and feeble
body, and was advised to travel to southern Africa in order to get away from the
London smog and find a climate where his physical limitations would not stand in
the way of his sharp intellect. The dry inland climate was a health benefit, which in
the latter half of the 19th century drew an ever-increasing number of Europeans to
South Africa, many of whom were consumptives (Packard 1989, p. 38–40). In
addition to the many travelogues that contained chapters on health (e.g. Bryce 1897,
ch. 1 and 2), a number of books and pamphlets were published around the turn of
the 20th century to promote South Africa as a health resort (e.g. Fuller 1892;
Marshall-Hall 1908; Scholtz 1897). 2 Similar conceptions of colonial life and health
have also been noticed in New Zealand and elsewhere (Wood 2005, ch. 1).
South Africa is a vast country with a large biodiversity and varied climate.
While the Cape and its interior have been described as a “health resort,” the famed
good hunting grounds along the northeastern seaboard were feared as the “white
man’s grave,” due to malaria and other tropical diseases (Nustad 2014). King
William’s Town has long been free from malaria, and with a healthy, dry climate
the arrival of the eucalyptus, notorious for its thirst and ability to “drain
marshlands” and combat malaria (Doughty 2000, pp. 36–41), would most likely be
differently received than in the wet, malarial marshlands of the northeast.
Consequently, my story of eucalypt transplants is one of several.
2
A noticeable boom in these writings started after the Suez Canal opened in November 1869, and the flow of
travelers who passed through South Africa decreased.
In pre-colonial South Africa, the native forests never covered more than 1% of
the territory (Carrere and Lohmann 1996, p. 198). At the time, there were distinct
discourses that associated this dry and barren South African land as health
generating. Actually, the word “savage” is etymologically derived from the Latin
“silva,” meaning “a wood” (Thomas 1984, p. 194), which is linked with a strong
medieval tendency to associate forests with “danger,” “disease,” and as places “for
animals, not men” (ibid.). Forests were places of “darkness,” associated with
“savagery,” “demons,” and places where mad people would be left behind (Philo
1997, p. 51). In such a context, the Cape and the barren interior plateau would be
perceived as healthy.
Simultaneously, there were counter narratives that surfaced in South Africa.
There are long historical lines in Europe that connect trees and forests with health,
and as early as the 1st century, Pliny the Elder (A.D. 23–79) associated woods with
health and healing (Thompson 1978). Through a number of publications, the
historian Richard H. Grove has established that tree planting and conservationism
surfaced at an early stage in the colonial worries about declining forests and
vulnerable tropical ecosystems. Grove has pointed out that the connections made
between degrees of forestation and rainfall have a long history in Europe, and were
articulated as early as at the end of the 17th century (Grove 1995, ch. 4). These
worries appear to have taken on a new significance when faced with colonial
“others” — be it people, climate or species. Grove has narrowed these worries down
to about the 1790s for the English-speaking colonies, and pointed out how by then
they constituted a coherent expression as “desiccationist theory” (Grove 1997, p.
149f.). The desiccationist theory postulated a causal relationship between forests
and rainfall, and argued that deforestation led to drought and climate change, with
soil erosion as an end result (Grove 1989). Hence, it was believed that forests
generated rain, and that drought was a consequence of human practices — which
in the colonial context was usually reduced to native culture. Moreover, traces of
desiccationist thinking are clearly visible in the civilizing mission.
By the time the first missionaries from the London Missionary Society (LMS)
entered South Africa at the beginning of the 19th century, the negative medieval
attitudes to forests and woodlands had long changed, and the dryness and
Brought death into the world, and all our woe. (in Grove 1989:166)
For Moffat, who looked at the region as “possibly the Garden of Eden”’, the
drought was self-inflicted and due to collective sinful transgressions implicit to
African culture (Grove 1989, p. 170f). The nakedness of the landscape appeared to
him as an offense along the lines of the naked African bodies. He therefore set
about clothing bodies and landscapes, encouraging the growth of local species to
“contribute to the beauty of a country,” as well as pioneering artificial irrigation
and developing commerce, a cornerstone in the civilizing mission (Moffat 1842, pp.
331–332).
A significant break came with John C. Brown, who arrived at the Cape as an LMS
missionary in 1844. His arrival coincided with a season of unusually good rainfall,
but was soon followed by the drought of 1845–47. In 1846, he published an English
translation of the missionaries Arbousset and Daumas’ (1836) descriptions of an
Edenic southern Africa. In this publication, the authors suggested that pioneer
missionaries should take good notice of the conditions of the people and land at the
time of encounter, for the introduction of Christianity was bound to positively
affect this relationship. Unfortunately the French missionaries walked right into
the territory after years of good rain, and Brown published the account when the
devastation of the 1845–47 drought became evident, a coincidence that did not
speak in favor of the missionaries (cf. Grove 1989). Brown left the Cape for England
after four years, and occupied a position as a lecturer of Botany at the University of
Aberdeen between 1853–62, only to return to Cape Town in 1862 to take up the
position as Colonial Botanist. Again, it was unfortunate that he arrived at the start
of the drought of the century, which was immediately followed by severe flooding.
In late 1863 he published his Report of the Colonial Botanist. The report quoted
Moffat extensively, yet he drew the unpopular conclusion that the droughts, floods,
soil erosion and pasture deprivation were as much a result of the settlers’ farming
practices as it was the indigenous pastoralism (Grove 1989, p. 178f.). He concluded
that reforestation was a necessity to secure further development of South Africa.
On Monday May 29th, 1876, the Cape Parliamentary Session dealt directly with tree
planting as being essential to stimulate economic growth, citing among other things
the need to investigate “aboriculture from New Zealand.” This was brought up
again in a short article on September 25th 1876, which due to its rapid growth
commented on the unparalleled expansion of eucalyptus worldwide. The policies
and practices that followed were built on the forestation of South Africa with exotic
trees.
There are uncertainties regarding the first transfer of eucalyptus to South
Africa, but it was at the start of the 19th century. Zacharin mentioned that the first
transfer came via Mauritius in 1803, and that there were a number of large
eucalypts in the Cape by 1820 (1978, p. 92), whereas Carrere and Lohmann trace the
transfer to 1807 (1996, p. 198) and Doughty dates it to 1828 (2000, p. 35). Though
written material is scant, a number of private individuals appear to have imported
seeds to be planted on their own estates from the early 19th century. By 1846, Joseph
Dicks had planted eucalyptus and acacias in the Howick area of Natal (Witt 2005, p.
101). Witt argued that these early transfers were primarily introduced as “landscape
modifiers,” beautifying the offensive “bare brown hills of Natal” (Witt 2005), while
being further diffused through personal networks and a growing number of tree
nurseries. My archival work indicates that diffusions through local nurseries were
proliferating from the mid-1870s.
As J. C. Brown argued, a scientific approach to forestry was also acutely needed
to satisfy local demands for building materials and firewood, as the already meager
forests in the region were rapidly depleted. Browns tenure as Colonial Botanist
coincided with the Great Depression of 1873–1894 (Wolf 1982, p. 303), which
increased the colonial pressure to support the ailing European economy
(Hobsbawm 1987, ch. 3). With the socio-economic changes that surfaced from the
latter half of the 1870s, the colonial policy changed and was more directly tuned to
the production of an economic surplus in the colonies, with the economic
imperative a regular concern every time the issue of forestry was mentioned. The
mining industry demanded a large amount of wood, as did the rapidly expanding
railways, which needed both railway sleepers and firewood for the steam engines.
The shipping industry and urban construction were also other big consumers of
timber. Extensive tree planting projects were started around the mines and along
the railway lines. In his publications as Colonial Botanist (Brown 1875, 1887), Brown
to a large extent exchanged the truth of the Gospel with the truth of scientific
analysis to help combat the environmental destruction. During the next century,
the South African landscape was gradually transformed by the pulp industry, as it
grew from its unfavorable ecological beginnings to become one of the top 10
exporters of pulp in 1994 (Carrere and Lohmann 1996, p. 43).
Though Moffat and other early actors seemed content to plant native trees, the
Europeans never seemed very impressed with the local species. For instance, Bryce
wrote that the native “trees are not lofty enough to give any of that dignity which a
European forest, say in England or Germany or Norway, often possesses” (1897, p.
28). The native species grew slowly, did not cast much shade and therefore did not
help retain much water. The general quality of the wood was also found lacking,
and was hardly even useful for fuel (Bryce 1897, p. 26f.). This negative attitude to the
colonial flora also dominated the European attitudes in the antipodes, which was
replanted with European oaks and pines. A number of commentators have
previously pointed out that British colonialists responded to displacement by
altering the foreign landscapes, planting species that reminded them of home (e.g.
Crosby 2003; Lien 2007, 2009). This process is clearly visible in South Africa as well.
In an editorial in The Cape Mercury, dated June 21st, 1876 the editor discussed the
“transplant of trees,” stating that the English “cannot rest in a new country until
they have made it look like home.” However, the South African story is interesting
because it breaks with this observation in one important area — the majority of
imported trees were not from Europe, but instead eucalyptus and acacias from the
antipodes. The trees that had up until then largely been considered “unworthy
species” in Australia and Tasmania (e.g. Hay 2002, p. 28) were the very species that
dominated the South African forestry sector from the 1860s onwards.
Thus far, the argument has been fairly straightforward, as trees have been
approached within both economic and symbolic frameworks. This fits well with
the dominant literature on the subject, which emphasizes the economic rationale
for planting the rapidly growing eucalyptus, as well as the felt need to ‘improve’ an
alien landscape. As previously mentioned, there is another trajectory in this story.
In a lecture on “South Africa as a health resort” held in the Royal Colonial Institute
in London on November 13th, 1888 Dr. Symes Thompson discussed the danger of
breaking new land in the colonies. Due to miasma being released from the earth (cf.
Thompson 1978, p. 529), he suggested to plant “a belt of Eucalyptus […] between the
house and the irrigated fields [to act] as an effective screen” (Thompson 1889, p. 26).
The eucalyptus genus consists of more than 700 species. With the exception of 15
that appear naturally in New Guinea and Indonesia, they are all native to Australia
and Tasmania. The eucalypts are hardwood, evergreen trees that early on were
considered anomalies since they typically shed their bark, and not their leaves. The
leaves are covered with oil glands and tend to hang downwards, thereby providing
patchy shade — a drawback in hot Australia, but not so in the more temperate
South African “health resorts.” The eucalyptus oil contained in the leaves and bark
gather around the trees and create a highly flammable environment that the trees
have adapted to. As a species that has been characterized as a “specialist in
exploiting disturbance,” Adrian Franklin has pointed out how, the eucalyptus
through what he coined “a dance of agency,” gradually replaced the rainforest
through natural ignition over the millenniums (2006, p. 562) to the point of
becoming so resistant to fires that they depend on them for reproduction (Hay
2002, pp. 210ff.; Pyne 1992). The flammable eucalypt oils are also known for their
antiseptic qualities, and are used in a wide range of products such as soaps,
industrial solvents, perfumes, foods and is widely recognized as a health product, as
well as common ingredient in cigarette production (Doughty 2000, pp. 8f). The
smell from the trees is strong and evocative. As one Australian I conversed with
while browsing for books on the eucalyptus put it: “In summer or heavy rain, their
smell assaults you — in a good way! I know I am home!” It was the olfactory aspects
of the eucalyptus that surfaced as a key factor in the early transfers in the archival
testimonies I encountered in King William’s Town.
From about Easter 1877, the newspapers and Borough Council meetings in King
William’s Town were increasingly preoccupied with issues of health. The topics
discussed and practices introduced included the incarceration of the “deranged,”
by-laws introducing curfews for Africans, 3 the introduction of public health laws,
home baths, bathing and the use of soap. The issue of smell increasingly dominated
the public imagination. As the local editor wrote: “This afternoon, New Town does
3
By-law 34 A, amended at after an unanimous vote at a special Borough Council Meeting held in King William’s
th
Town on Friday December 7 , 1877. Natives caught without “a pass signed by his or her employer [faced]
immediate imprisonment, and such fine, not extending £5, as may be imposed by the Resident Magistrate; or
imprisonment for a term not exceeding three months”.
not smell, it stinks.” 4 To counter the offensive smells, the primary response was not
soap, as I expected, but tree planting. The following letter to the editor of The Cape
Mercury on April 16th, 1877 is typical:
The sensory orientation in the world Chadwick describes here is quite different
from the contemporary emphasis of the visual consumption of the natural
4
The editorial from the Cape Mercury, dated Wednesday May 15th, 1878.
environment (Urry 1990). Though I have shown that there existed a strong trend to
use tree planting as a visual landscape modifier — a trend it is easy to pick up on, as
it resonates with the contemporary preference for the visual — the archival
material has revealed a strong dependence on smell for orientation in an
environment filled with death and disease, which was present to humans through
olfactory perception. In such a landscape, people would use their noses to orientate
as they moved about (Flikke 2005).
As Gell (1977) convincingly argued, the semiological status of the olfactory sign
is highly ambivalent by nature. It is neither a universal “chemical communication,”
nor a linguistic system where signs evoke meaning in relation to other signs in the
total system. In other words, the meaning of the olfactory influence is not to be
found in a paradigmatic relation to other smells. Rather, the olfactory experience
evokes meaning through its relation to a context in the physical world. A smell
thereby acquires influence as an “anticipatory sign,” which irretrievably guides the
awareness to the source of its existence when sensed. This direct link leaves little
room for idiosyncrasy and focuses attention on the source. Rachel Herz pointed to
the socially constructed aspect of smells when she wrote that “nothing stinks, but
thinking makes it so” (Herz 2006, p. 202). However, it is important for me to point
out the fact that smells are processed in the limbic system — the emotional center
of the brain. This ensures that human responses to specific and unusual smells are
emotional more than rational, and in an evolutionary context has served to warn of
dangers, as well as linking these experiences to memories in ways that secure an
immediate response (cf. Hensaw 2014, ch. 3; Engen 1991). Olfaction is hence
culturally and historically constituted at the same time as it is hardwired in ways
that ensure prompt reaction, and not reflection and contemplation as Herz
emphasized in the above quote. We do not think about danger — when we get a
whiff of a disturbing smell, we react towards danger. It is important to stress that
the introduction of eucalyptus happened during an epidemic crisis that can be
described as a “sanitation hysteria” (Laidler and Gelfand 1971, p. 362).
I have suggested elsewhere that the early African travelogues preoccupation
with landscape and climate are best read as medical notations (Flikke 2003). As
“malaria” (mal aria ‘bad air’) testifies to, fevers were taken to be the result of high
temperatures and humidity levels, which accelerated putrefaction and released the
poisonous gasses of miasma (e.g. Pelling 1978; Sargent 1982). In this context, Gell’s
Sir, I have the honour to draw the attention of the Mayor and
Borough Council to the sanitary state of this town, which, owing to
its low situation, will, I fear, yet prove a hot bed for many diseases,
from which both old and young will suffer. […] Blue gums should be
planted as much as possible about the town. We all wish to live as
long as we can, and to preserve the health of those committed to our
care, and if we all unite cordially for these objects, I have no doubt of
success. We have one of the finest climates in the world, and if we
have pure good air both within and without our houses, we shall be
placing ourselves in the most favourable position for attaining our
end. Fish live in a medium and that medium is water; now if we
pollute or poison the water, the fish will either sicken or die. Man
lives in a medium, and that medium is air, so abundantly necessary
for our existence; in like manner, if we pollute or poison the air by
noxious effluvias, we shall most certainly suffer sooner or later in
proportion to the amount poison. —I have, & c.,
J. P. Fitzgerald, M.D.,
Superintendent of Native Hospitals
Though almost 150 separate Ingold from Fitzgerald, the focus on our air, as the
medium we both live in and through, is something they have in common. My
suggestion in this paper has been to ponder whether it might be worthwhile to shift
our focus when we view the South African eucalypts, or the natural world in
general for that matter. I have suggested that the smells of Victorian King William’s
Town constitute a significant surface in the world, a surface revolving around
questions of health and disease, and life and death. Maybe the most significant
roots of the eucalyptus are not those they ply into the ground to extract nutrients,
but instead the scents that extend through the air, merging with us as we inhale,
reminding us that we are tied together in ways that are more than meaningful —
they are actually essential for our foothold in this world.
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We talk a little bit about conflicts surrounding the invasive cane toads in
Western Australia, about the local branch of the Department of Environment and
Conservation (DEC) and about her own role in the KTB. It was always first and
foremost a matter of educating people, as far as she was concerned, which she still
does from the vet center. The toads can be a good means to get people’s attention
also to other issues of nature and wildlife – an interest in toads could lead people to
take greater interest in nature generally. She tells me she “toadbusts” around her
own place from time to time, but not nearly enough, “it’s never enough.” You can
hear the toads around here at night, she says. I attest to it as well, having heard
them over at the KTB’s headquarters which is only a few kilometers from Cecilia’s
place. Sometimes she finds dead turtles or snakes. ”It breaks my heart,” she says,
and it is especially bad if they have died from ingesting toads. She goes on to tell me
about the great changes happening in the Kimberley. She has lived in the region for
more than twenty years, and seen the change happening – especially in the last
decade. When she first moved here, in the wet seasons, she recalls how the bush
would be teeming with wildlife – everywhere and all the time there would be lots of
snakes, reptiles, frogs and marsupials. Now there is just fewer of all the animals, she
tells me – except for the toads. Many of the species that were a regular sight back
then are seldom or never seen now. Strictly speaking, no extinctions have been
recorded though, and she says it is a terrible paradox that it might have to take
extinctions before people, especially the politicians, realize something has to be
done. The Kimberley is undergoing a dramatic change for the worse, and the most
critical aspect isn’t the toads, she explains, it is the changing fire regimes. Cecilia
emphasizes that they, meaning DEC, burn too much, and burn too intense fires.
The rationale is to prevent uncontrolled wildfires, but according to Cecilia it has
the collateral effect of decimating wildlife. Feral cats are also a major problem and
a part of the change, she says, as they eat small birds and small mammals and are
very difficult to control. But just as Cane Toads, cats don’t have much of an impact
on agriculture or pastoralists, and if no one loses money on it, it’s not regarded as
important. Between fire regimes and feral cats, it seems to Cecilia, the toads are
truly the icing on the cake.
The focus of this article is some of the practices of the community group
Kimberley Toad Busters. 5 The KTB is part of a quite extraordinary spur of
engagement that started around 2004 and is still going. Several volunteer groups,
scientists and government agencies then mobilized in an effort to slow down the
spread of the toads and to attempt to mitigate the impact they would have on the
native fauna of the Kimberley-region in Western Australia. Over the years this has
involved trying out different technologies of control, including trapping, fencing
and manually collecting toads in all their life stages (“toadbusting”), as well as new
biological controls. This article explores the KTB's efforts to create and nurture
engagement from the Kimberley community. How does a community group
motivate members of the community to do toad control and how are toads and
Kimberley nature enacted in the process?
Much of the literature in the humanities and social sciences about invasive
species has tended to regard engagements with such cases as in truth concerning
political and societal affairs. 6 It has also often tended to revolve around some
version of a paradox – often a tension of conserving nature by unnatural means 7 –
and most of it has been grounded in dualisms of nature and culture. Similarly, the
terms native and invasive have been scrutinized and found to be fraught with
paradox and contradiction. 8 Such approaches often tend not to take seriously what
people say and do, often basing themselves on mainly textual sources rather than
on practice, and as they seek to use cases concerning invasive species for the
purpose of exploring and explaining something political, in the worst instances
5
I conducted ethnographic fieldwork in 2012 focusing primarily on the practices of the Kimberley Toad Busters,
but also looking at many of the other actors engaged with toads in Western Australia and the Northern
Territory. In addition to qualitative open ended interviews, a large number of everyday conversations between
people in the KTB inform this account. Over the course of my fieldwork such conversations occurred every day.
6
E.g. John and Jean Comaroff, “Naturing the Nation: Aliens, Apocalypse and the Postcolonial State,” Journal of
Southern African Studies 27 no. 3 (2001): 627-651; Anna Tsing, ”Empowering Nature, or: Some Gleanings in Bee
Culture,” in Naturalizing Power: Essays in Feminist Cultural Analysis, ed. Sylvia Yanagisako and Carol Delaney
(New York: Routledge, 1995)
7
Kay Milton, ”Ducks out of Water: Nature conservation as boundary maintenance,” in Natural Enemies: People-
wildlife conflict in Anthropological Perspective, ed. John Knight (London and New York: Routledge, 2000): 229-248
8
E.g. Charles R. Warren, “Perspectives on the 'alien' versus 'native' species debate: A critique of concepts,
language and practice,” Progress in Human Geography, 31, no. 4 (2007): 427-446; Banu Submramaniam, “The
Aliens have Landed! Reflections on the rhetoric of biological invasions,” Meridians: Feminism, Race,
Transnationalism, 2, no. 1 (2001): 26-40
they distort rather than shed light upon the cases themselves. Contrarily, in this
9
paper I aim to take seriously in ontological terms the worldings and
contextualizations that my informants themselves perform. This means not
regarding what informants say as one of many possible perspectives on a shared
reality, but rather as itself productive of realities. In this paper I mainly follow the
concerns and curiosities of my informants. I attempt to avoid looking for
paradoxes, simply because the paradoxes that social scientists find rarely are
paradoxes for the people we study; instead they often arise from assumptions we
hold that our informants do not share. Hence taking seriously my informants’
concerns and being selective and conscious about what analytical trails to follow is
also an attempt to avoid inadvertent or veiled explanations. I take what people say
and do, myself included, to be diffractions 10 in the world, not reflections of the
world, and instead of asking how the case displays aspects of nativeness and
invasiveness, I ask what an invasive species would be if modeled on volunteer “toad
busters'” practices of enacting and contextualizing cane toads in the Kimberley. I
ask the reader to join me for the time being in holding in abeyance whatever
assumptions they may have about what an invasive species is.
A first set of questions revolves around images of change: How images are
composed, enacted and articulated; and what images do – what they enact and
what actions they are mobilized in. In this regard I take inspiration from certain
strains of Actor-Network theory to emphasize enactment 11 as ontological shaping
and cutting and avoid taking entities from granted, so as instead to look at how they
come into being and are sustained and altered in practice.
9
Anna Tsing, “Worlding the Matsutake Diaspora. Or, Can Actor-Network Theory Experiment with Holism?” in
Experiments in Holism, ed. Ton Otto and Nils Bubandt (Blackwell Publishing, 2010), 47-66
10
Karen Barad, Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and
Meaning, (Durham: Duke University Press, 2007)
11
Annemarie Mol sees enactment as a concept that retains some of the characteristics of both 'performance' and
'construction', while avoiding the problematic aspects of both. See Annemarie Mol, The Body Multiple: Ontology
in Medical Practice, (Durham: Duke University Press, 2002)
Just as animals, images can be seen as “actor-enacteds” 12, entities that both act
and are enacted – that fluctuate between being held temporarily still in enactment
and being “moment[s] of indeterminacy” 13 as actors.
Cecilia articulates in the conversation I started out with many features of what I
take to be a toad busters’ image of changing nature. This image evokes other
images of dead animals and localized extinctions. It is an image of an environment
with far less wildlife, where people are no longer able to encounter the animals
they love. Not only is it heartbreaking to find individual dead animals out bush, the
toad busters’ image also shows the bleak prospect of having a bush no longer
teeming with wildlife. In place of a diversity of different species, there will be
millions of toads, and very little of anything else.
12
John Law and Annemarie Mol, “The Actor-enacted. Cumbrian Sheep in 2001” in Material Agency: Towards a
Non-Anthropocentric Approach, ed. Carl Knappet and Lambros Malafouris (Düsseldorf: Springer, 2008), 57-78
13
Law and Mol, “The Actor-enacted”, 74
domestic pets are seen as friends and companions but also snakes, lizards, birds
and marsupials.
The KTB’s presents an image of a radically altered environment. Far from the
pristine, untouched Kimberley that the tourist industry often portrays, it is a
Kimberley where you hear mostly toads, you see mostly toads, and when you can
neither hear them nor see them, they still make your favorite swimming spots stink.
INDIGENOUS IMAGES
14
J. R. Nyquist, “Care and choice in dealing with the invasive Cane Toad in Western Australia” The Australian
Journal of Anthropology 25 no. 1 (2014): 22-36
For the last few years the KTB have held an annual toadbusting camp with
aboriginal KLC ranger groups. 15 This year’s camp was held at Doon Doon very
close to the westernmost cane toad “frontline” and more than 50 rangers took part.
Some of them came from as far as Derby, more than 800 kilometers away. This
year the goal was also to get some short interview segments made with some of the
rangers. On the second day of the camp, KTB volunteers Michael, Paul and Keith
prepare for the interviews. Paul has already picked a nice spot with a bit of scenery
and some trees in the shot and the first one to be interviewed is Mandu from
Nyikina Mangala Rangers. Michael is sitting down on the grass with Mandu, Paul is
filming, Keith is holding the microphone boom and I have been given the
ungrateful task of trying to keep Michael’s puppy dog from barking or running into
the shot. Michael asks Mandu questions such as where he has come from, what he
thinks about toads, what he reckons the toads will do to the environment and to
their culture and why they toadbust. They do a few more interviews with some of
the others from Mandu’s ranger group. Later in the afternoon they also do some
interviews with a couple of the guys from one of the other ranger groups, Wungurr
Rangers. Relieved of my task as dog watcher I have a chat with Mandu while
Michael and the others do the rest of the interviews. After the last one, he comes
over to me with a big grin and tells me about the last interview and what Trevor,
one of the rangers, had said – the quote at the start of this section. He says this is
just the sort of stuff he wants in these films and he is very happy that Trevor said it
without him having to put words in his mouth. All the rangers have emphasized
traditional hunting and that their bush tucker and traditional practices will be
imperiled, which Michael thinks is excellent.
15
Kimberley Land Council is a body representing and assisting the indigenous traditional owners in the
Kimberley. They run a ranger program where aboriginals are employed to “look after country” as they put it on
their web site (http://klc.org.au/rangers/). In the case of the ranger groups I spoke to, this would for instance
involve control of the invasive rubber vine and doing biodiversity surveys.
16
This is a different emphasis than the Yanyuwa people in the NT give to the toad and their status. According to
Kathryn Seton and John J. Bradley “'When you have no law you are nothing': Cane Toads, Social Consequences
and Management Issues,” The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology 5 no. 3 (2004): 205-225, among the Yanyuwa, the
toads are regarded as a pest mainly because they have no traditional law, and hence “…no place to fit within
existing structures” (213). Whereas the Yanyuwa try to get rid of toads because they have no law, the indigenous
indigenous image of change, just as the toad busters’ image, portrays local
extinctions and a radically altered Kimberley. However, the focus is markedly on
loosing traditional bush tucker, spirit animals 17 and as some put it, the basis of their
culture. The indigenous image shows a Kimberley without many of the animals
that are significant for traditional practices. The toads are simply seen to imperil
different practices and different relations for indigenous and non-indigenous toad
busters. Because of the toads it will no longer be possible to connect to certain
animals or maintain relations and practices in the same way – be it through
hunting or through appreciation of wildlife. In the situation just recounted the
indigenous image is made to work to the KTB’s advantage in presenting a different
emphasis from the toad busters image of change. But it is not always like that.
I experienced very clear discordance between the images quite a few times
during fieldwork. Goanna – an umbrella term for several species of varanid lizards
– is arguable one of the highest valued bush foods for most indigenous people in
the Kimberley, but also one of the species the toads have the highest and most
uncontested impact upon. Only a handful of times did I see a goanna around the
Kununurra area, and each time the toad busters I was with would express a great
delight that even with toads in the area one can still from time to time encounter a
goanna.
people I spoke with were rather concerned that when Cane Toads hit their country the culture, of which
traditional law is a part would be imperiled. However, the similarities are also evident as Seton and Bradley
write: “…one of the most far-reaching consequences was the stress and depression among Yanyuwa women
when their daily movement across country in search of normal target prey (such as goanna and blue-tongue)
led only to ‘finding Cane Toads in their holes’…” (214-215).
17
A term used by some toad busters, also some indigenous toad busters.
Toad busters then, shape and assemble their image of change differently in
different situations, sometimes incorporating the aboriginal image with its
emphasis on loss of bush tucker and other traditionally significant animals, other
times othering these aspects. In some situations the discordance between the toad
busters image and the indigenous image is unarticulated, or even actively “un-
known” 18.
Clearly, neither the KTB nor their indigenous volunteers are motivated by a
vision of a pristine wilderness that needs protection. Instead, they want to intervene
with specific changes happening in the Kimberley. Toad busters do not idealize a
distant wilderness or a pure and pristine nature, but rather the practices and
experiences of living in the Kimberley; bodily and experiential images of sensing
and being with animals, and concerns about tradition and valued practices that
might be imperiled are central. This keeps us clear of paradoxes, but also of
generalization and leaves us with a specific story that is no longer necessarily and
unequivocally about wilderness, nature, conservation and environmentalism, any
more than it is reducible to olfactory aspects or hunting.
We sit down with Jason at one of the tables in the restaurant at Home Valley
Station in the East Kimberley. He works in the bar at the station (which is now
predominantly a tourist resort) and has been doing reconnaissance trips in the area
to see how far the toads are from Home Valley. He tells us he has been taking some
trips along the Gibb River road spotlighting for toads several times this wet season
and he tells us where he found toads the last time he went out. Robert, Caroline
and I have just come from a recon along the King River road and we show Jason on
the map were we found the westernmost toads. They seemed to be further along
18
Paul Wenzel Geissler, “Public secrets in public health: Knowing and no knowing while making scientific
knowledge,” American Ethnologist, 40 no. 1 (2013): 13-34
the way around the Cockburn Ranges than he thought and Jason is surprised to see
that they are so close. They might be at Home Valley within the next couple of
months, he concludes. We discuss where it would be good to do tonight’s
reconnaissance trip. He shows us roughly where he has been and when, and
suggests that we do the road that goes down towards El Questro Station. He also
says we might have a look in at Emma Gorge, at the Cane Toad fence that Stop the
Toad Foundation (another community group) put up last year. We discuss whether
this is a good idea and eventually decide against it on account of the strained
relation between the KTB and Stop the Toad Foundation. Jason says he’ll be doing
some recons closer to the station in the coming period and also check an old
mustering track that goes around the Cockburns, and all the creeks along there.
Before we go, he tells us about the snakes around the place. He has been keeping
track of the different species he has seen and caught and he is worried about what
will happen when the toads arrive. Robert mentions that some stations in the NT
are reporting that after the toads, they see mostly Keel backs – a snake that can eat
toads without ill effects – and Black headed Pythons – a snake-eating snake, and
very little else.
The first trial run for the KTB’s kids at risk program – a program aimed at
getting aboriginal children out of town for a weekend to be challenged under the
guidance of good role models – had to be cancelled at the last minute because of
the weather, and this evening nearly all of us who were to be involved in running it
were over at Michael’s for a barbeque. Lee, the KTB’s president, had just come back
from Perth where she had given a talk for the Kimberley Society 19 and had a
meeting with the environment minister Bill Marmion, and she is telling us about
her experience. She says she admitted to Marmion that it is no longer a matter of
stopping the toads, but that they instead are trying to mitigate the impact and buy
time for animals and scientists – and this is no less of an important reason for
funding to be granted them. Lee puts a lot of blame on the federal Cane Toad
Threat Abatement Plan – she says that because it discredits research that is
pragmatic and explorative the effect is less funding both for community groups and
for scientist. She also tells us she spoke to Marmion about some of the indigenous
issues in the Kimberley, and soon the conversation veers towards horrific stories of
neglect of children and third world conditions in aboriginal communities –
atrocities that go on right here in town. I had gotten a glimpse of it myself when
dropping off kids after a toadbust, kids who weren’t sure which house they should
go to that night. Most of the places are littered with empty beer cans and emanate
loud music and shouting. But the stories Maggie tells – she worked for some years
in a local aboriginal corporation – are far worse than what drinking and shouting
could ever hint at. Phil – a professional outback survival expert from Perth –
emphasizes that “we are all together in this; it is the community's problem, not just
the aboriginals”. Toadbusting could be a glue to hold the community together and
act as an equalizer – “we are all the same when it comes to toadbusting.”
In this conversation several themes and domains are connected and interwoven
to articulate what the toad case is all about. The talk almost seamlessly transits
from political processes to the objective of the toadbusting endeavor and on to
research and funding issues, indigenous problems and visions of betterment for the
community. It is the situation – where people whose commonality is the toad case
are gathered – but also a commitment to continuity with the past that lets such
domains be connected and articulated together.
19
An organization that promotes research on topics related to the region.
20
Cf. Charis Cussins, “Ontological Choreography: Agency Through Objectification in Infertility Clinics,” Social
Studies of Science, 26, no. 3 (1996): 575-610
21
Cf. Tsing, “Worlding the Matsutake Diaspora”
hand as irreducibly singular and divorce it from any analytical contexts and wholes
(as much of Actor-Network-Theory does 22 ). Another solution is by way of
recursivity 23, diffraction 24 or by shifting perspectives 25, to turn things back on
themselves. Such sideways conceptualization is an endeavor to make abstractions
without making generalizations 26 and it can thus function as a middle way between
explaining with contexts and excluding contexts completely.
TOAD TALKS
Jim and I checked for breeding on the way out to Parry’s Creek Farm. We stopped
by some of Jim’s usual places, but we also checked some new ones for signs of eggs,
tadpoles or metamorph toads. Emily at Parry’s had spoken to Michael and wanted
someone to come out and help with the tadpoles in the lagoon and to get some
photos of the dead turtles that they found a couple of days ago. Parry’s is a resort
and a popular site for birders, but during the wet season, Emily and Patrick, the
caretakers, are the only ones there. Jim does most of the talking. Emily says they’ve
been going out nearly every night around the place to catch toads and that they
think there are toad tadpoles in one of the lagoons. We bring a couple of hand nets
and follow Patrick and Emily down to the lagoon. One end of it is thick with
tadpoles. Jim confirms to them that they are indeed toad tadpoles and explains how
one can tell the difference – none of the tadpoles of native frogs are as jet black as
the toad tadpoles, the native ones usually have a longer tail whereas the toad ones
are quite stumpy. As I start scooping up tadpoles, Jim tells Patrick and Emily about
how best to do tadpole control. A trick is to net the tadpoles and crush them up
with your hands and then chuck them back in. Then an alarm pheromone is
released from the crushed-up tadpoles that the other tadpoles react to. Apparently,
22
For two of the most programatic presentations of this purposefully myopic irreductionist approach, see
Bruno Latour, “Irreductions” in The Pasteurization of France, ed. Bruno Latour (Cambridge Mass.: Harward
University Press, 1988) and Bruno Latour, Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network Theory,
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005)
23
Martin Holbraad, Truth in Motion: The Recursive Anthropology of Cuban Divination, (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 2012)
24
Barad, Meeting the Universe Halfway
25
Marilyn Strathern, Partial Connections, (Savage Md.: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 1991)
26
Martin Holbraad and Morten Axel Pedersen, “Planet M: The Intense Abstraction of Marilyn Strathern,”
Anthropological Theory, 9, no. 4 (2009): 371-394
says Jim, it makes them stressed causing them to grow smaller and have a lower
survival rate. Jim also points out up on the side of the lagoon such places where the
toads might be found during the day. They burrow, under roots or other places that
are damp and shady. “They’re truly an amazing animal,” Jim says, “you gotta
admire it for what it can do.” Jim talks about how hardy they are – how they can go
on hopping even with a missing limb and how they don’t seem to be bothered the
least bit having swallowed centipedes and scorpions – and how adaptive they are –
it continually surprises how they are able to do things no one thought they could.
They can climb, they can burrow, and they can swim. Jim tells them about the time
Michael was out in the middle of Lake Argyle (Australia's largest man-made lake)
with a film crew from “60 minutes” when they suddenly saw a toad swimming
beside the boat. It had been swimming all the way out there, many kilometers from
shore. It is also quite amazing how they all seem to be heading the same direction
and spread so fast, “they’re certainly good at what they do,” Patrick remarks.
This toad talk draws attention to what was the original aspiration of the KTB’s,
namely to be a group that assists and makes it possible for people in the Kimberley
to toadbust on their own. The talk differs from the conversations in that it is a more
asymmetrical relation between the parties. It is a clear divide between Jim who is
speaking authoritatively about toads and Patrick and Emily who are on the
receiving end. This divide is embodied in such things as the fact that Jim drives a
KTB car, wears a KTB shirt and occasionally answers the phone at toad HQ, but it
also lies in the difference between what Jim knows and what Patrick and Emily
know, and in each of their assumptions about what the other party knows. Through
talks such as this one, the KTB extend and nurture involvement, and Emily and
Patrick respond by actively engaging themselves with the toad case. To the effect of
generating engagement and action, Jim deploys some of the realities that the KTB
have shaped among other things in the conversations described above. For one
thing, he evokes an image of change. This doesn’t fail to find resonance with
Patrick and Emily who respond with their own story of the turtles they suspect of
having been killed by toads. The toad as amazing animal is one of the realities Jim
articulates. This involves a toad that defies established expectations and
continually surprises, and it is a toad assigned certain positive features. Other toad
realities are only hinted at, while others again are actively or passively excluded.
Jim hints at a scientific toad when he explains pheromones from crushed up
tadpoles. This is a toad known by chemical formulas and controlled
experimentation. Crushing tadpoles up and putting them back in the water has
effects that are not immediately visible to toad busters, but rather known through a
trail of scientific reports diffused through public forums and other correspondence.
The process by which scientists established truths about pheromones and their
effect on tadpoles, as well as the process through which the KTB came to adopt and
adapt the technique is not articulated in the toad talk. What is even less articulated,
and what one can only notice by seeing an absence against a possible presence, are
the toads as a nexus for conflict. One could depart in this direction from Jim’s
remarks that until scientists come up with a solution, only manual toadbusting
really works. If only manual toadbusting really works, what doesn’t really work is
fencing and trapping, which is what Stop the Toad Foundation has advocated. I am
able to make this connection, and notice the absence of such a connection, because
it is one that was made in several other conversations on toads. Jim is able to leave
it out to the effect of nurturing engagement on the basis of an assumption that it is a
set of connections that Patrick and Emily are sufficiently unaware of not to notice it
as an absence. In this situation Jim enacts a separation between the KTB and
members of the community in order to speak authoritatively on toads and thereby
nurture engagement, but he also enacts the situation as one that Patrick and Emily
can readily attach themselves to, and thereby become toad busters.
During my time in the Kimberley there was a handful of relatively new places
for the toads and for the KTB, and it was one of the first major info meetings they
held in Halls Creek, a remote former gold mining town in the south east Kimberley,
that I was a part of at the end of February 2012.
After a dinner with Mary who invited and arranged the info meeting, a meeting
with two friends of Michael’s who work with Juvenile Justice and a talk on the local
radio, the big info meeting was due at midday on our second day in town in the
Shire Hall. We set out chairs with a KTB pamphlet on each and Michael hooks up
his laptop to the projector and makes sure his Power Point presentation is ready to
go. The meeting has been advertised in the local paper, on the radio and on notes
hung around town. The hall gradually fills up after Michael has started and at the
most there are about 50 people present. Michael does a toad talk. He talks about the
unique biodiversity of the Kimberley and what will happen to the region because of
the toads. Accompanied by photos of iconic Kimberley animals, animals dead from
ingesting toads and graphs that show declines, he explains how the toads not only
impact by lethal ingestion, but also through decimating the invertebrate base and
by occupying shelters and burrows that native animals need. He goes on to talk
about what can be done. He talks about the fantastic Kununurra community and
how they can really see that it helps. What can be done, he says, is to mitigate the
impact and buy time for scientists to come up with a solution and for animals to
adapt. Toadbusting, he emphasizes, can also keep the environment from becoming
thoroughly toad dominated.
Towards the end it is opened up for questions. Some of them concern myths
about toads. Someone wants to know if it is a good idea to kill toads with golf clubs,
while another one has heard that crows have learned to flip toads over and eat out
their stomach avoiding the poison, and wonders if there is hope that other animals
could learn in similar ways. The question round also presents people with the
opportunity to share their own experiences and stories of toads – one middle aged
man goes on for some length about his experiences with toads in Queensland in his
youth. After the meeting, conversations continue outside as the barbeque is going
and a sheet where people can put their name and contact info so they can be
contacted when the toads arrive is being passed around.
As toad busters and others articulate images and toad realities, the toad
multiplies and differentiates with different connections in practices of nurturing
and generating engagement. However, articulating an image of change does not
necessarily compel one to act. An image of change is not meant to be a necessary
and sufficient explanation for why toad busters commit themselves to engagement
with the issue. Indeed, for each toad buster and member of the community there is
a particular and specific complex of motivational grounds, even while they all
might share some variation of an image of change. At this stage then, I can point
out that what emerges from toad busters’ conversations and talks are certain
images and certain toad realities. This is far from insignificant. However, while it is
relatively easy in this instance to say something about how realities are posterior to
practice, it is much harder to say something about how they are anterior to practice,
as it is always in practice that we come across them. I wish to avoid having to resort
to envisioning some kind of repertoire or repository of images that one can draw on
and mobilize, and that exists outside of and prior to practices and things. This
would propel me back into dualism. In addition to the long recognized problems
with extracting motivation and intention from practice or exegesis, Actor-Network
Theory and its cognates associated with a “philosophy of adding”( Asdal 2012, 379-
403) have a particular additional problem with saying anything at all about
grounds, reasons, causes and everything else anterior to articulation and
27
See Vicky Singleton, “When Contexts Meet,” Science, Technology and Human Values, 37, no. 4 (2012): 404-433 for
a similar argument.
28
Similarly T.M.S. Evens, Anthropology as Ethics, (New York & Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2007) sees ambiguity as
the basis of reality, Quentin Meillassoux, After Finitude: An essay on the necessity of contingency (London & New
York: Continuum, 2009) writes about the necessity of contingency and Andrew Pickering sees the world as an
“...inexhaustible font of emergent phenomena.” Pickering, “The World Since Kuhn”, Social Studies of Science, 42,
no. 3 (2012): 469
29
Lesley Head and Pat Muir, ”Nativeness, Invasiveness and Nation in Australian Plants,” Geographical Review
94, no. 2 (2005): 199-217 among others also notes this aspect of the term as a widespread conception.
Conceptualizing invasive species as matter out of place also enacts this double separation between belonging
and alien and culturally ascribed and naturally given.
30
Nigel Clark, “The Demon-Seed: Bioinvasion as the Unsettling of Environmental Cosmopolitanism,” Theory,
Culture and Society 19 no. 1-2 (2002): 101-125 similarly describes a cosmopolitan environmentalism in which a
premise is that “…left to itself, nature is docile….” (107)
(Helmreich 2005, 107-128), where the concept of invasiveness was continually under
negotiation and different definitions abounded, in my case it was largely relegated
to the margins, undefined and undiscussed. Neither in practice nor in discourse did
the Cane Toad case uphold a clear-cut dichotomous ontology. Thus appears an
interesting tension where from the outside, Cane Toads often figure as the
prototypical invasive species, whereas when one comes to be immersed in the
complex interaction among and between toads and toad busters they appear as
anything but.
REFERENCES
Asdal, Kristin. 2012. Contexts in Action—And the Future of the Past in STS.
Science, Technology & Human Values, 37, no. 4: 379-403
Barad, Karen. 2007. Meeting the universe halfway: Quantum physics and the
entanglement of matter and meaning. Durham: Duke University Press.
Bennett, Jane. 2010. Vibrant Matter. A Political Ecology of Things. Durham: Duke
University Press.
Brenna, Brita. 2012. Natures, Contexts and Natual History. Science, Technology &
Human Values, 37, no. 4: 355-378.
Clark, Nigel. 2011. Inhuman Nature: Sociable life on a dynamic planet. Los Angeles:
Sage Publications.
Comaroff, John and Jean Comaroff. 2001. “Naturing the Nation: Aliens, Apocalypse
and the Postcolonial State”, Journal of Southern African Studies 27 no. 3: 627-651
Geissler, Paul Wenzel. 2013. “Public secrets in public health: Knowing not to know
while making scientific knowledge.” American Ethnologist, 40, no. 1: 13-34.
Head, Lesley and Pat Muir. 2004. “Nativeness, Invasiveness and Nation in
Australian Plants.” Geographical Review, 94, no. 2: 199-217
Helmreich, Stephan. 2005. “How Scientists Think; about 'native' for example. A
problem of taxonomy among biologists of alien species in Hawaii,” Journal of the
Royal Anthropological Institute, 11: 107-128
Holbraad, Martin, & Pedersen, Morten Axel. 2009. “Planet M: The intense
abstraction of Marilyn Strathern.” Anthropological Theory, 9, no. 4: 371-394.
KNUT G NUSTAD
BEYOND PURIFICATIONS:
For centuries the Umfolozi River has been washing down silt, creating a river delta
with extremely rich soil on its way to the Indian Ocean. The flats, covered in bush,
stretch all the way to the ocean in the east and are met by a subtropical forest to the
north. Between the forest, the river and the sea lies one of Africa’s largest estuaries.
It is teeming with wildlife—hippos, crocodiles, elephants and other animals are
here in abundance. Africans had been using the forest and the area as hunting
grounds and as a place to hide during conflicts as the impenetrability of the forest
made it hard to traverse. For a long time the forest and the flats were protected
from white hunters as well because malaria made travelling here extremely
difficult. But at the beginning of the twentieth century the potential of the area as
agricultural land was realised, and a heroic effort to make the land suitable for
sugar cane production began. In the words of one of the first settlers to arrive:
I fell in love with Umfolozi from the beginning. The Flats took their
name from the broad flowing Umfolozi River, which as it neared the
sea, formed a huge flat basin of rich alluvial soil. It was a waste of
forest, papyrus and elephant grass in the river delta. Umfolozi was
on the borders of Natal’s white settlement; beyond was Native
Reserve. To tame this wild place and bring it into fruitful production,
appeared a man’s full sized job (Heaton Nicholls 1961, 92–3).
And a man’s full sized job it must have been to tame it and turn it into
productive land. After successfully establishing a sugar cane plantation and finally
managing to gather support for the creation of a mill controlled by the farmers, a
series of floods destroyed the mill and several of the farms. But these were hardy
men. Heaton Nicholls describes his fellow settlers as men of the British Empire
who had travelled widely and been engaged in shipping tea in Burma, growing
coffee in Nyasaland, worked on the Panama Canal, grown sugar in Demerara,
digging for gold in Kalgoorlie. Heaton Nicholls himself had just arrived from New
Guinea. These men cleared the flats, channelled the river, drained the swamps, and
fought to take control over the sugar mill and in the end created the rich farmland
that still exists today.
We are leaving town in the early morning while the air is still chilly. As we pass
the gates of the reserve, the landscape opens up. In the distance, trees, and a group
of bucks grazing; still further on a rhino. Together with a couple from the
Netherlands we are driven in an open safari vehicle into the park. Most people only
experience the wildlife from behind their windscreens, but this morning our guides
will take us walking among the animals. We especially want a closer look at the
black rhinos that this area is known for. The black rhino has a reputation for being
fierce. Therefore, in addition to our guide, a game guard with a rifle is
accompanying us. We are told to run for the nearest tree should a rhino charge.
After an hours walk, we see a group of animals towards the edge of a clearing, quite
a distance off. The guard tells us to keep low as we approach. We manage to get
quite close to them before they sense us, raise their heads, and walk slowly off.
This experience was made possible by the pioneering work of Ian Player, who
in 1959 led the first wilderness walk. He believed strongly that urban dwellers
needed to reconnect with wilderness and nature as he himself had done through
his experience as a game guard. Player, in addition to being an unrelenting
advocate for conservation, has also published a number of books where he vividly
describes for the reader his experiences of wilderness, as here, when the bush
wakens to life after a storm:
The forest and the river provide people with fruits, wild animals to hunt,
springs of fresh water and fish, as well as firewood and material for sculptures to
sell to tourists; they also serve as grazing fields, while the floodplains around the
river contain earth so rich that it could be used as fertiliser. We are sitting under a
tree with a group of young men who live in the forest. They explain that the soil is
so rich that there is no crop that could fail to grow here. Together we examine a
map of the surrounding area. They point to the cropping fields along the river and
explain that these are their source of wealth. This is where they grow different
types of crops like bananas, which they sell for money. The land along the river is
the main reason why they live in the forest. Most of the people here are
unemployed, and their source of livelihood is the cropping fields. They explain that
the type of high-quality soil found in that portion is unique to the forest.
The youth also point to the wetlands shown on the map, and say that they can
use these wetlands to create jobs. They can use them to attract tourists. The
indigenous forest contains trees that are not found in other countries, and they
know which trees these are. There are also unique wild animals, as well as plenty of
fish in the Umfolozi River and Lake St Lucia. These resources will contribute a
great deal in creating job opportunities, such as the project the youth have in mind
of rearing fish for commercial purposes.
Livestock used to be more important before, but as land for grazing has become
scarce, this is now less of an option. The cattle invade people’s cropping fields,
thereby creating tension in the community. They instead try to keep smaller
livestock such as goats and chickens.
The people who live here have an intimate relationship with their environment.
They know which wild animals live in the forest and how to hunt them. They know
which fruits and crops to plant in the flood plains. This is an environment that is
actively used and managed. People know when the different animals give birth and
avoid hunting them during such times; they also cut trees to create grazing and
cropping fields. They agree that there is not a lot of forest left behind now. Most of
the trees around their homesteads have been cut down to create space for houses
and cropping fields. The exception is a part of the forest called Futululu, which
remains untouched.
Three forests: one converted to productive industrial agriculture and rescued
from wilderness, one indigenous forest representing the wild and original Africa, a
home, and one converted to small scale production and utilised for its resources.
But these forests do not exist as discrete, bounded and separate realities. They are
rather emergent possibilities in more or less the same area. The area is known as
the Dukuduku forest. It lies adjacent to South Africa’s first UNESCO World
Heritage site, the Isimangaliso Wetland Park, which received its world heritage
status as the Greater St Lucia Wetland Park in 1999.
My first introduction to St Lucia and the Dukuduku forest was in 2007. It is one
of the most spectacular and beautiful areas I have seen. Heading north from
Durban for a few hours, you leave the N2 and travel for half an hour or so, first past
the town of Mtubatuba and finally towards the coast of the Indian Ocean and St
Lucia town, the estuary and the beaches. As you approach the coast, the planted
eucalyptus trees give way to sugarcane plantations and finally warning signs with
pictures of hippos, crocodiles and elephants.
Nearer the wetland park, the scene changes again as the road passes through
what is left of the Dukuduku forest. Along the road, young boys have erected stalls
selling woodcarvings of wild animals and “upside-down trees”, small trees with
roots shaped so as to resemble the crown, for the tourist market. A bit further on, to
the right, the lush vegetation is suddenly replaced by a typical scene from rural
South Africa: small homes, clearings and cattle tended by young boys. The road
then takes you over a bridge that crosses the estuary which is one of St Lucia’s main
attractions. Pausing at the bridge and looking down into the estuary, you can see
schools of hippos lounging about in the muddy water and flat-bottomed tourists
boats congregated around them. After passing an unmanned security checkpoint,
you enter St Lucia town itself. This small town, in size rather a village, was
established in the 1930s to cater for tourists and fishermen, and it still serves mainly
as a tourism destination. A few shops and restaurants are situated on the main road
as you enter the town, while guest houses and a few hotels are spread along the half
a dozen other small streets with names such a Kingfisher Street, Hornbill Street,
and Dolfyn Avenue. Trees and bushes take up the space between houses and
surround the town, giving it the feel of being situated in a nature area. Should you
wish to go for a walk, one route will take you through a small wood where you are
likely to encounter small duikers, or bucks, and then down to the estuary, where
you have to watch out for crocodiles and hippos. From there, a wooden path takes
you toward the beaches of the Indian Ocean and past the estuary mouth, popular
with local fishermen. Standing on the beach, you can on a clear day see how it
stretches for miles and miles to the north.
Just north of the town the Isimangaliso Wetland Park begins. From the Cape of
St Lucia, it stretches for 220 km along the coast, all the way to the border with
Mozambique. The park covers an area of 320 000 hectares and, according to the
information prepared for visitors, has “three major lake systems, 8 interlinked
ecosystems, 700 year old fishing traditions, most of South Africa’s remaining
swamp forest, Africa’s largest estuarine system, 526 bird species and 25 000 year old
coastal dunes – amongst the highest in the world”.
If you, like me, arrive for the first time in the area as a tourist, browsing the
many whale watching, hippo cruising and game touring options, you might be
forgiven for not having noted the Dukuduku forest on your way in. From the
comfort of your car as you cruise along the road towards the park and the town,
there does not seem to be much left of it. Not many trees are visible from the road.
Also hidden from view is the Umfolozi river, the river that Ian Player crossed and
experienced as home, the river that both made the flats so inviting for the sugar
cane growers and which destroyed their mill, and the river that in the last decades
have drawn poor people to settle and seek to make a living cultivating its banks.
The forest was originally meant to be part of the park, but in the end it was
excluded from the World Heritage application because of its contested nature. The
proposers of the park were uncertain of whether the application would succeed if it
included the forest, whether it was possible to convincingly claim that the
Dukuduku forest was part of a natural environment worthy of protection.
For as the three depictions above make clear, the Dukuduku forest is not one
but many. One is a primordial forest first pushed close to extinction by industrial
agriculture and forestry, and whose remaining enclaves are being cut down by
squatters who have no appreciation for nature. Another forest is being reclaimed
by people who have been forcibly evicted from it, first in the name of forestry and
more recently in the name of conservation. Yet a third forest has been successfully
converted into sugar cane fields and industrial forestry through the planting of fast
growing species.
Conservationists argue that the black smallholders who have cleared the forest
and created fields and homes there are destroying a unique indigenous forest. The
carved figures sold by the road and the upside-down trees are likewise held out as
examples of senseless destruction of the environment. By contrast, many of the
people living in the forest tell stories of decades of forced removals and harassment,
first to make place for industrial agriculture and forestry, now to protect the
environment.
Many different groups thus have a stake in St Lucia and what it is. Is it a unique
piece of a primordial Africa, to be preserved for future generations? Or is it prime
agricultural land, one of the cornerstones of the sugar industry that has generated
so much wealth in the region? Or yet again, just another example of enclosures by
white people, land taken from African forefathers that is now being claimed back?
Land roamed by wild animals, planted with imported pines, with sugar cane, or
cleared by smallholdings – all these constitute different realities in the making.
These realities also blend and mix into each other, sometimes as jarring
reminders of other realities in the making, sometimes in the form of violent
conflicts. In the visions of undisturbed nature created in the park, roots of
imported pines stand as reminders of other forces. The Dukuduku forest is both a
site of livelihoods and preservation. People living there complain of harassment
when they treat the park and the forest as resources, and conservation nature is
threatened by invasions and land claims.
In this paper I will use these emergent and contested realities as a case to
examine nature conservation in the form of protected areas as one of the responses
to environmental destruction. One problem with protected areas, I will argue, is
that they build on a separation of the natural and social, even in their attempts at
mediating conflicts between conservation interests and the communities living
adjacent to protected areas. In place of this, we need to explore what conservation
in a world that is emergent and fluid would entail. But first a short introduction to
the situation in St Lucia as it appears today.
NATURES IN ST LUCIA
St Lucia has been a site of contestation for a very long time – not just by different
groups over access to the same resources (although this is an important part of the
story too) but also over the nature of what St Lucia is. With the area serving as
hunting grounds for Africans as well as for colonial expansion, the relationship
between people and animals was radically altered in the mid-19th century, when
Zululand was incorporated into the global economy of animal trade goods, first and
foremost ivory. This trade, although controlled by white traders and hunters from
Natal, also created networks of Africans and Europeans to supply these goods.
The heavy pressure on those animals sought for their horns, skins and meat led
to their near extinction, first around large settlements such as Port Natal, later in
more remote areas of Zululand. The colonial elites reacted to the disappearance of
game by redefining their relationship to these animals as one of ‘sport’. This
simultaneously re-cast African hunters and their hunting methods as poaching, as
cruel and unsportsmanlike. In so doing, colonial elites were quite deliberately
tapping into a long history, stretching back to antiquity and the classics in which
they were well versed, whereby power and superiority were demonstrated by
performing the Hunt.
But the St Lucia area was also subject to other forces that sought to make real
very different relationships between people and animals. Most importantly, the
African small-holders resented the restrictions on their access to animal resources,
both because this deprived them of an important resource, but also because
restrictions on shooting wild animals near their homesteads led to crops being
destroyed and diseases spreading, first and foremost the wasting malady nagana.
Fearing political unrest, the colonial authorities decided to allow some hunting
around African homesteads, and at the same time created game reserves in the
most remote and disease-infected areas, among them the Dukuduku forest of St
Lucia.
The work of the delimitation commission in the early years of the 20th century
and the subsequent opening up of Zululand for white settlers altered relations
profoundly. New plant species were introduced, most importantly eucalyptus, pine
trees and sugar cane, to be grown in the rich soil of the river beds of the Umfolozi.
The capital invested in this new production was also used to change the landscape
dramatically – not only were forests cleared and new species planted in its place,
but the very course of the Umfolozi River was changed. The river, which had
meandered across the plains on its way to the St Lucia estuary, was channelled, and
its mouth shifted so that it emptied directly into the Indian Ocean.
way for the new industry, and many of the game reserves were de-proclaimed
because they were seen as harbouring diseases that threatened livestock
production. The people who had been living in the St Lucia area were forcibly
moved to make place for these new enactments. Removals from the Dukuduku
forest took place in the 1930s with the establishment of forestry operations and,
with far more publicity, from the Eastern shores in the 1950s. The argument for
these removals was then to enable industrial utilisation of the land.
But transformations such as these are neither linear nor causal. Counter-
currents arouse that sought to place familiar elements in new relations. In St Lucia,
plans for strip-mining the sand dunes and the ensuing campaign to save St Lucia
served as the catalyst for a new enactment of nature. In celebrating the “wild lands”
of St Lucia, the removal of forests and draining of swamps that had been heralded
as the masterful taming and utilisation of the land by the authorities and the first
settlers were now seen as destruction: destruction of the primordial, of the pre-
human, of the wild and natural Africa. Among the emergent affluent middle
classes, the industrial transformation of the landscape created its inverse – a
longing for nature, untouched nature. In the South African case, this movement
can be traced to the merging of two genealogies – on the one hand, an elitist
transformation of the Hunt into nature conservation, part of an international set of
relations that saw attempts at having game reserves established throughout Africa,
the downward mobility of some of these sentiments to the emergent middle classes;
and, on the other hand, the South African political project of forming a basis for a
new white national identity by linking it to romantic ideas of the pre-settlement
landscape on the other.
restitution process; other are violently opposed to such attempts. Neither do they
agree on how to relate to those who have previously accepted offers of
compensation for leaving the forest, nor on how to relate to park authorities and
other officials.
The struggle over what St Lucia is to be is not just symbolic: it is also a very real
struggle over what the land actually is, and how it will physically look in the future.
The outcome is not a foregone conclusion, and whether industrial agriculture, land
claims or conservation nature will emerge as the dominant reality remains to be
seen. As far as the Dukuduku forest is concerned, two opposed futures seem to
present themselves – one claiming that biological and conservation sciences tell us
that humans do not belong in ‘nature’, and that to save such nature, we need to
recreate a dual ontology materially by erecting fences, policing borders, and
prosecuting trespassers. People who relate to their environment as small-scale
producers constitute a competing reality. As we have seen, this conflict recreates a
conflict rooted in colonialism, over access to natural resources.
The problems faced by St Lucia are not unique. They are rather the norm wherever
protected areas are created. Establishing protected areas seems intuitively correct.
If the environmental problems facing many parts of the world have been created by
human processes such as industrialisation and pollution and environmental
destruction, if, we as some suggest live in the age of the anthropocene, then surely
the obvious solution must be to protect and save at least some areas from these
negative influences by keeping people away from them.
This policy has been pursued at least since the final decades of the 19th century,
and with great success. Official records now lists over 105,000 protected areas in the
world, covering more than 20 million km2. There is, however, one serious problem
with holding up conservation through protected areas as the solution to
environmental challenges. This strategy builds on an ontology that posits a
fundamental distinction between humanity on the one side, and nature on the
other. This is problematic for two reasons: First, many protected areas are
surrounded by conflicts. Some of these are conflicts with neighbouring
communities over access to resources in and surrounding parks. While it is highly
questionable to use violence to prevent people from trespassing on conservation
areas in the name of saving nature, it is even more problematic to justify this with
reference to protecting animals and landscapes for the consumption of visitors.
Second, the idea that nature and humanity are fundamentally opposed is an idea
with specific origins. One of these origins is found in the reaction to the dramatic
changes of rural areas that took place with industrialisation. The ensuing
transformations of rural areas created in some people a romantic longing for areas
that had not been transformed by these changes, a nature pure and pristine. If our
sense of nature as undisturbed by humans is a reaction to the main problems of
environmental change, we have to be suspicious of posing this as the solution to the
very same problem. In other words, if the ontological distinction between nature
and humanity evolved as a reaction to the destruction of environments, can that
same ontology form part of the solution?
Critiques such as these sparked a new trend in conservation policies from the 1980s,
with a belief that it was possible to combine the interest of indigenous and
traditional peoples and conservation. Programmes variously labelled community-
based natural resource management, community-based conservation, sustainable
development and use, grassroots conservation and integrated conservation and
development programmes abounded.
But the outcomes of these attempts left much to be desired (e.g. Benjaminsen
2008, 2009, Kepe 2007). The goals of conservationists and indigenous peoples were
seldom aligned. Conservation projects give priority to biodiversity conservation –
often understood as protecting nature from the impact of people, indigenous or
otherwise. Indigenous people, on the other hand, often start from the need to have
their rights to land legally recognised, and then to find ways of using resources that
will not deplete them. In a report published by the Wildlife Conservation Society
and based on a survey of 37 case studies, Agrawal and Redford (2006) conclude that
interventions tend to fail because policies are based on over-simplified
understandings of both poverty and biodiversity.
This is a problem that has affinity with discussions in the related discipline of
development studies (Brockington has repeatedly called for closer integration of
the two academic disciplines of environmental and development studies, an
approach I wholeheartedly support). Critical studies of development interventions
have pointed out that in “participatory” or “bottom–up” approaches to
development, closely affiliated to the idea of community-based conservation, the
goal that is supposed to grow out of the process of development itself is of necessity
defined prior to the development intervention (Nustad 2001). True, the rhetoric is
different – here the argument was that people themselves best knew how to achieve
development ends and that the role of the expert should be to facilitate this process
of development rather than to determine it. This has in most cases not worked at
all, becoming a travesty in many development interventions as when experts say of
people they have worked with that they have been “facilitated” or even
“participated”, clearly showing where these experts really believe that agency lies.
Where conservation goes wrong, then, in my view, is in insisting that nature is one,
singular and external to human society. In its place we need a conception of our
surroundings as environments, as shaped by humans and non-humans alike, and
Treating realities as emergent and fluid rather than ungraspable or rigid raises
the stakes for both research and activism. Describing protected areas as both
created and as one version of Africa among many others has two implications: on
the one hand it can add materiality to our understandings of environments in a way
that social constructivist analyses cannot, by revealing the relations which make
them real. At the same time, however, the approach shakes their very foundations
by showing that they are not the only possible reality. Yes, within a conservation
enactment, the existence of small-scale agriculture constitutes destruction, and the
planting of eucalyptus trees means aiding an alien invasion. Similarly, within a
small-scale production reality, the erection of fences, the (re-)introduction of wild
animals and the killing of trespassers is yet another instance of dispossession of
land and resources.
Treating realities as multiple thus shifts the focus to where the real problems
that we are facing are located – in the juncture of our way of living in the sum total
of our relations with other entities, human and non-human – in short, our
environments. It does away with the fiction that these challenges can be solved by
recreating ontological dualisms – creating fences between nature and society, and
then violently policing these.
This idea of interventions is not only based on dualism. The way in which
policymakers and environmentalists posit “the global environment” as an entity at
the same time constitutes other people’s views as local and partial. To hold that
one’s own outlook is global means simultaneously claiming that other people’s
views are partial. The conflicts that surround the Isimangaliso Wetland Park, and
many other protected areas, are rooted in claims of representing the global. From a
global perspective it makes sense to listen to local concerns, and perhaps also
seriously consider their points of view, but any relationship that is constituted as
local will always have to be subsumed under the global. The global actor knows
what is best in the end because only he (and with environmental management it is
very often a “he”) knows what is for the greater good. As a planner told Hughes in a
workshop outside Pretoria: “peasants see the landscape from the snake level”
whereas policy makers see “the landscape from the bird’s view” (2005, 161).
But these scales have to be conjured (Tsing 2005). Hughes (2005) shows how
conservationists in Southern Africa seek to transgress national boundaries and
imagine conservation areas that stretch from Cape to Cairo. Büscher (2013) likewise
details how the Peace Park Foundation denote itself as the global solution to
conservation problems, and as the antidote to the colonial imposed division of
Africa into nation states.
BEYOND DUALITY?
Today it has become part of mainstream conservation to argue for the importance
of taking into account both conservation goals and the interests of impoverished
surrounding communities. But such optimistic assessments are increasingly being
subjected to doubt by conservationists and development workers alike. Most
commentators have concluded that the various schemes to combine development
goals of poor communities and conservation interests have failed (for overviews,
see McShane et al. 2011, Hirsch et al. 2011). Moreover, these approaches seem to
have failed in both their stated objectives: ecologists complain that the attempt at
combining development goals and conservation objectives has impacted negatively
on biodiversity, and that that these approaches are at their core ecologically
unsound. Those working with development issues, on the other hand, complain
that the economic gains from protected areas have been too small and too late in
arriving, that these areas do not tend to create the jobs promised, and that any
benefits that do occur tend to be concentrated among the elites (McShane et al.
2011). Unsurprisingly, these sentiments have led to increased irritation and
militancy on both sides, with indigenous organisations and some NGOs becoming
more anti-conservationist, and conservationists arguing for dropping integrated
projects and returning to a purer form of nature conservation (McShane et al. 2011,
968).
Alongside this polarisation, other scholars have argued for a concept of ‘trade-
offs’ to replace the win–win discourse. This would appear sensible: the approach
recognises that conservation goals and development goals are often impossible to
reconcile and that real choices have to be made between the two. Its proponents
hope to counter the cynicism produced by the current cycle of win–win promises
and policy plans and failed results on the ground. They also point out some of the
pitfalls: a trade-off perspective may easily be construed as a technical exercise
obscuring the basic questions of who loses, who benefits and who pays. From the
group running the Advancing Conservation in a Social Context has come a list of
guiding principles for analysing trade-offs and hard choices (McShane et al. 2011,
969 ff), which include issues of scale, context, pluralism and complexity. Among the
latter is this principle: “human and natural systems are inextricably linked”.
While sympathising with this attempt to move beyond the win–win discourse, I
do not believe that the concept of trade-offs goes far enough. The question is not so
much how human and natural systems are linked, as how the idea that
environments can be conceived as consisting of two “systems”, one human and the
other natural, arose in the first place. The concept of trade-offs is a first step
towards recognising this, but it still seems to take for granted the separation of two
distinct realms of reality – one social part of reality addressed and championed by
development workers, and one natural part which belong to the realm of ecologists
and conservationists.
Using the St Lucia case as a starting point, the question becomes instead: is
biodiversity conservation simply the latest manifestation of white, European and
elite attempts at separating poor people from natural resources? To argue that this
is not the case, and that protected areas do serve some purpose, we must
nevertheless recognise the most of today’s parks and protected areas, at least in
Southern Africa but also elsewhere, are the result of past dispossessions and
dualities imposed on environments. In other words, we need to ask: with what right
do we continue to impose a separation of the natural and the social on rural
landscapes? With what right do we restrict access to these areas to those who can
afford to pay to enter them so that they can satisfy their yearnings for pure
wilderness and untouched natures? With what right do we police and sometimes
kill those who transgress these enactments?
The idea of wilderness builds on purification. At its roots lies an idea of nature
undisturbed and untouched by humans. But efforts like these always produce new
sets of impure entities, new forms of hybrids. The paradoxes involved in creating
wilderness in St Lucia are glaring: they require the use of modern ecological
science and practices such as the use of fire to mimic the effect of the human
inhabitants who once shaped the environment but have now been displaced from
the area. One node in the human–environment relation is sought purified – while
the other is banished, expelled, made invisible. The creation of a nature free of
human influence takes a lot of human work. This purification is coupled with the
even more problematic violent policing of boundaries.
This is why it is important that both environmentalists and social scientists seek
common ground. Perhaps there is hope: Aidan Davison (2008), studying Australian
environmentalists’ conceptions of nature, finds a complex interplay of dualist and
non-dualist understandings of “nature” and “society”. When expressing pessimism
about the project of conservation, his respondents relied on an understanding of
nature as external to human society. Asked to reflect on their own experiences,
however, they produced a much more nuanced understand of humans-in-
environments. Davison concludes that, even among people actively working to
protect environments then, “ideas of untouched nature exist in complex
interdependence with non-dualistic understandings of the seamlessness of social
and natural existence” (2008, 1294).
REFERENCES
Benjaminsen, T.A., Kepe, T. & Bråten, S. 2008. Between global interests and local
needs: Conservation and land reform in Namaqualand, South Africa, Africa,
78(2), pp. 223-44.
Büscher, B. 2013. Transforming the frontier: peace parks and the politics of
neoliberal conservation in Southern Africa, Duke University Press, Durham.
Büscher, B.E. & Whande, W. 2007. Whims of the winds of time? Emerging trends in
biodiversity conservation and protected area management, Conservation and
Society, 5(1), pp. 22-43.
Cowen, M.P. & Shenton, R.W. 1996. Doctrines of development, Routledge, London.
Cronon, W. 1996. The trouble with wilderness: or, getting back to the wrong nature,
in W Cronon (ed), Uncommon ground: rethinking the human place in nature,
W. W Norton & Company Inc., New York, pp. 69-90.
Davison, A. 2008. The trouble with nature: ambivalence in the lives of urban
Australian environmentalists, Geoforum, 39(3), pp. 1284-95.
Heaton Nicholls, G. 1961. South Africa in my time, Allen & Unwin Ltd, London.
Hirsch, P.D., Adams, W.M., Brosius, J.P., Zia, A., Bariola, N. & Dammert, J.L. 2011.
Acknowledging conservation trade-offs and embracing complexity,
Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology, 25(2),
pp. 259-64.
Hughes, D. 2005. Third nature: Making space and time in the Great Limpopo
Conservation Area, Cultural Anthropology, 20(2), pp. 157-84.
Kepe, T. 2007. Land claims and comanagement of protected areas in South Africa:
exploring the challenges, Environmental management, 41, pp. 311-21.
Kepe, T. 2009. Shaped by race: why “race” still matters in the challenges facing
biodiversity conservation in Africa, Local Environment, 14(9), pp. 871-8.
McShane, T.O., Hirsch, P.D., Trung, T.C., Songorwa, A.N., Kinzig, A., Monteferri,
B., Mutekanga, D., Thang, H.V., Dammert, J.L. & Pulgar-Vidal, M. 2011. Hard
choices: Making trade-offs between biodiversity conservation and human well-
being, Biological Conservation, 144, pp. 966-72.
Nustad, K.G. 2001. Development: the devil we know? Third World Quarterly, 22(4),
pp. 479-89.
After several hours of travelling, taking off from flat Danish soil, flying over the
enormous white inland ice cap, abruptly pierced now and then by black cliffs, small
lakes and autumn colored mosses and lichen, we arrived in Kangerlussuaq,
Greenland, where the daily plane from Denmark lands on the airstrip left behind
by US military. To reach our final destination – the remote Nalunaq gold mine in
Kirkespirdalen in the southernmost part of Greenland where a week of
anthropological fieldwork awaited – we further depended upon so-called “good
weather”, another smaller airplane, a helicopter, a mining company boat, and a
minibus, as well as people to run all of these machines. Almost as a prologue to our
upcoming week, we found ourselves whirled around by complex relations between
humans and the forces of nature and were completely dependent on the
collaboration of others.
By the end of September the small plants in Kirkespirdalen had used up their
chlorophyll and were slowing down and shifting their activities. The Nalunaq
mine, too, had run out of steam – the British mine company that managed it had
spent all the money invested and all profit procured, and at the time of our
fieldwork the employees were in the process of packing up and closing down – all
while hastening to process what remained of blasted ore in the mined mountain
and preparing to pour the last doré bars.
A battered van took us the last 9 kilometers to the mine camp from the harbor
where the mine company boat had anchored. Eddie and Bryan, two experienced
employees who were returning from two weeks off in Lithuania and Ireland
respectively, were with us in the van, and when it came to a halt by the mine camp’s
centre, the two of them simultaneously marked our arrival, one of them by saying
“welcome to hell!”, the other exclaiming “home sweet home!” Getting out of the car,
we all laughed – maybe at the synchronicity and seeming incommensurability of
the expressions.
These words of welcome were said in a light and joking atmosphere, but
nonetheless – and perhaps all the more important for it – these two radically
different but obviously coexisting analyses of life in the camp became a guiding
light for us. In order for us to engage with the workings of the mine, we learned
upon our very arrival that we needed analytical apparatuses stretchy enough to
accommodate the range of perspectives implied in Bryan and Eddie’s words. We
were excited and puzzled; how could the mine be referred to as both a sweet home
and hell at the same time? How would we respond to the challenge of not going
with only one or the other portrayal, perhaps fulfilling an already conceived idea of
what a goldmine is and making just the kind of clear cut judgments that seem
obvious when engaging with a notoriously polluting and extractive mining
industry? And finally, what is gold in Nalunaq when it requires the combined
forces of workers’ heterogeneous ideas, explosives, cyanide, global capital, trucks
and sometimes even anthropologists among many other things for it to be
produced? To explore these questions, we needed to get out of the car, onto
common ground, and engage with the Nalunaq mine, where a series of
collaborations, local analyses and comparisons all went into producing gold in the
middle of nowhere.
The fieldwork at the Nalunaq gold mine is part of a research project about the
processing of raw materials (www.naturalgoods.saxo.ku.dk). One of the central
analytical tenets of the project is to try to keep our objects of study – four selected
natural goods – “underdefined”, thereby letting the practical and analytical
processing of them coproduce what they are and become. In the case of gold, then,
this implies that instead of starting out by looking for a fixed natural unit – e.g. a
chemical number – which can then be seen in different perspectives, our ambition
is to disturb any such notions of pure or core objects and the idea that various
perspectives are ascribed to the presumably stable object. The point here is to work
productively with the stance of not yet knowing what is at the centre of our analysis
– in other words, only to know just enough of the object’s contours to recognize it,
and then focus on the processes that make it vibrant through internally
heterogeneous qualifications emerging from the fieldwork. One implication of not
having determined the nature of our object from the outset – i.e. asking what it also
is – is that we try to direct acute attention to ways in which the object gets
generated in the very processes of people’s engaging with it. This, we suggest,
implies a kind of lateral curiosity where we depend upon the engagements of
others in order to make our objects appear – objects that are born out of
collaborative processes rather than being “theirs” or “ours” (Hastrup 2011). Lateral
curiosity, then, is not just a matter of being curious personally, but also of trying to
make our collaborators curious about the world we share and often take for
granted and of being willing to consider alternative ways of living. It is an impulse
to invite people into the dialogue and ask for their analyses, thereby potentially
changing, affirming, reconsidering – if ever so slightly – what they make of their
lives, while hopefully enjoying the exchange with the curious newcomers. Lateral
curiosity nurtures a kind of common ground, collaborative in nature, and
challenges stereotypes and smooth analyses (cf. Tsing 2005). As we see it, the
underdefined nature of objects and the virtue of lateral curiosity make analytical
work add to what is explored – though sometimes only for a moment – rather than
deconstruct it. The objects of study, then, emerge as actual products of joined
forces, exploring what else the world might be.
This brings us to another key point of our research as a whole: we are not out to
unveil hidden information or dubious agendas of, say, the mining industry and
reveal the ways that it might stabilize concerns as facts or construct its own truth.
Such an ambition of unveiling, we think, would demand too settled an idea
beforehand of what the object and its context(s) are. The generative approach that
we argue for, where objects get made in the collective processing of them, implies
that our material or data if you like can only be seen somehow as “public
knowledge” – that is, products of encounters in the field that have no given and
external context, apart from the connections and backgrounds that we commonly
create, highlight or ignore, whereby, of course, such connections can no longer be
seen as contexts but become “text” (Brichet & Hastrup 2011).
This idea of “public knowledge” is not to preclude the possibility of critique nor
of looking to the cultural history of phenomena, though. But it is an attempt to
locate and practice such critique and history somehow within what is explored,
thereby employing the field as a site where contradictions might arise,
disagreements emerge and paradoxes queue up. Critique, then, is not a matter of
distance or demolition, but rather an attention towards possibilities of thinking
beyond the stereotypes – exactly the product of lateral curiosity.
Indeed, in the Nalunaq mine, wreckage would be easy to pinpoint and criticize
according to established notions of what makes a beautiful landscape, as would, in
fact, recovery – but our challenge is to engage collaborators on site and explore the
often ambivalent analyses that articulate the place as home and hell at once,
thereby embedding critical reflection. This is a way of poking at the field that is
intended to make people curious about their practices – potentially interweaving
new analyses into existing ones. As we see it, this is a productive take on the
discussion of representation – we are not out to first find and then limit our own
biases and those of others so as to get at a more exact representation that builds on
self-reflexivity, nor are we out to reveal where someone else has got it wrong so as
to demonstrate how particular perspectives get (falsely) purified as truths. The
notion of fieldwork material as public knowledge is a post-representational move
that attempts to place the analytical processing out in the open, on the surface
where things come together, instead of trying to peek behind the scene. The open,
to be sure, can be ripe with conflict and diverging ideas, as of course with
confidentiality and trust, but why not offer to explore and discuss these features?
Engaging with extractive mining, we think, calls for and possibly poses a challenge
to such willingness to explore the field as yet undetermined. What we try is to carve
out a room for conversation, spurred by lateral and generative curiosity, even about
practices of ruination. Hell and sweet home, as we were reminded, were both
qualifications of the machine that produced gold in Nalunaq. As we shall see, such
conflicting analyses abounded. With these thoughts in mind, now let us turn to the
interiors of the Nalunaq gold mine.
Some 20 kilometers of tunnel and slopes crisscross inside the mine. For a country
like Greenland, where no towns are really connected by road to any other towns,
this is a lot of road – even if we disregard for a moment the even more striking fact
that it is all inside a mountain and thus not very visible from the outside. Nor, as it
happened, from the inside, where driving up and down, and round in spirals in the
worn out pickup truck was a truly disorienting experience. Even though we of
course had some ideas in our heads about small gold jewelry objects and uniform
gold bars in the cellars of banks, the first days in the mine really confirmed our idea
of not yet knowing the nature of gold. We were amazed at what we saw in
Kirkespirdalen. Compared to the smallness of a golden ring or even a gold bar, the
enormous machinery and human labor engaged in producing gold at the Nalunaq
mine seemed completely wild and, to be honest, quite out of proportions. A small
village housing up to 130 people at its peak had been built, comprising barracks
with single rooms for each worker, a fully equipped industrial canteen, bathrooms,
a nurse’s office, a fitness center, cleaning ladies, a harbor with a pontoon that had
come all the way from Mississippi, machines and vehicles of various types and
scales, a lab, a storage room the size of an indoor soccer field, containers filled with
tons of explosives to blast the mountain into releasing ore, ore and even more ore,
loads of which were moved around in trucks and along various conveyor belts
inside the mountain. An underground processing mill, crushing the ore into small
rocks and then dust, which gets mixed with water and cyanide that liquefies the
gold, for it to solidify again, to finally be melted into gold bars, had been
constructed inside the mine and now ran 24 hours a day.
We were certainly not aware of all this energy that it took to produce a monthly
yield of approximately 20 kilograms of gold. The mill, as the workers called the
processing plant, was adjusted according to the concentration of gold in the rock; in
Nalunaq one thousand kilos of ore would eventually produce about 10 grams of
gold on average. The massive discrepancy between a ton of blasted rock and 10
grams of noble metal and the effort it took to make the first into the latter somehow
surprised us. The combination of large and heavy quantities and the smallness of
the end product – costly enough, though, to have kept the mine running for almost
a decade under shifting managements – brought home the point of exploring gold
not as a given but as a contradictory and strange product. We felt thrilled and
lucky, and slightly ashamed, that we had not really thought about gold in terms of
the concrete efforts it took to procure it, except from a limited perspective.
During the first few days of our fieldwork, it only got more and more concrete.
Instructions of how to use the mandatory emergency “life saver” to be worn on the
belt that went with the working overalls, hardhat, hearing protection and security
capped rubber boots, learning about the procedures of always keeping track of the
number of people in the mine at any time, as well as about the huge quantities of
food that were needed to feed the miners made it all appear as very serious
business. On the other hand, we kept thinking and talking about it all as much ado
about nothing. In a way, it seemed absurd comedy to us; all that machinery and the
seriously challenging logistics to produce something small enough to fit in a
shoebox, most of which is furthermore taken somewhere only to be stacked
underground again in some high security hold. But then again, we discussed,
maybe this is the way our global economy also works.
Talking to miners, kitchen staff, cleaners, mechanics and others, gold was only
rarely the topic of our conversation. People would tell us about their daily chores,
about who was currently the mine’s champion of the pool table in the recreational
room, or about their home town, whether in Greenland or elsewhere. Gold seemed
strangely circumstantial, although it was the only reason that the mine camp and
the jobs there even existed. “A pile of dirt, is all it is”, Bryan said, while
continuously telling us that we should really stay for the next and final pour of
gold, scheduled a few days after we had planned to leave. Seeing that, Bryan told
us, would be an experience of a lifetime. This, he went on, was when the “guys who
have worked their butts off” saw for themselves that it paid. In the days following
each pour pictures with miners holding the gold bars would pop up on people’s
Facebook profiles, for a short while dethroning the beautiful landscape photos that
otherwise dominated the virtual life of the Nalunaq employees.
What struck us was that gold was both articulated as the driver of the entire
operation, emptying a whole mountain with a marvelous result that could be
displayed in photos and that paid (almost) enough to keep the mine company in the
business, and an incidental product that in a sense did not compromise the natural
beauty of the area, which the employees preserved in countless other photos and
continuously directed our attention towards, whether by pointing out stunning
peaks or remnants of old Norse settlements. At Nalunaq people seemed to live well
with this ambiguity.
Before visiting the Nalunaq mine we were asked by colleagues if it had been
difficult to be granted access to the mine. We had also worried that the fact that the
mine was closing due to bad economy would make the managers hesitant to allow
visitors. However, access proved to be ridiculously simple – it just demanded a
short phone call to the director of the mine and an email where the purpose of the
visit was stated as an interest “in the social processes and relations that go into
making pure gold (…) all the work, considerations and knowledge that are needed
in order to make something appear as a so-called ‘raw’ material.” (excerpt of a letter
to the director of the mine). After some days, not only a positive answer but also an
invitation to be their guest was in the inbox. At first, only one of us (Nathalia) was
going, but it so happened that both of us suddenly had the opportunity to go, which
meant we had to get back to the director asking for another bed, worrying that we
were stretching our welcome a little. He responded with even more generosity,
arranging for us to be picked up by the company boat at the heliport and have free
board and lodging in the camp for a week.
After a few days in the mine, many different people began inviting us to the
official Saturday bar night in the camp. In the afternoon, Peter, the director, had
taken us on the 9 km scenic drive down to the harbor to check on the explosives
that were stored there, but first and foremost he wanted to pick at an iceberg to get
“some million year old ice to cool our drinks for tonight”. In the evening, we stood
in the bar and small-talked with Peter, who was full of jokes. The atmosphere
shifted between light and more severe, as our conversation evolved around Peter’s
years in the foreign legion in Africa and as a parachute solider in the British army,
the Nalunaq mine and the mining industry seen from his view, more stories from
his life, photos of his beloved dog back home in England. We knew and could sense
that he was a demanding and much respected boss, but much to our surprise every
now and then he mixed his conversation with conjuring tricks from his restless
hands. After yet another trick, involving a pencil, a business card and a 100 kroner
note, I (Nathalia) asked him “Peter, how come you actually let us come and visit the
mine?” He looked at us and said “oh I must have been in a good mood, and you put
in a very charming request”. We laughed, but then he continued, “well, you must
have caught me at the exactly right time...maybe after a good pour…but yes, it
would have been easy to turn you down, you must have introduced your project in
a way that I liked”. “Well,” I responded, “I was actually also a bit worried that you
wouldn’t like to have an anthropologist sneaking around”. For a few seconds his
restless body stood still and he looked me right in the eye and said “Recently, I had
an email from a Japanese film crew who wanted to make a film about the mine, but
you know what?” he asked rhetorically, “they said the wrong word, the E-word”. I
was a bit flurried by our precarious conversation, having a feeling of teetering on a
knife’s edge, so I must have looked completely clueless – “Environment” he finally
said with a serious mine. I got even more perplexed and instinctively did not really
want to hear more. Fortunately he took up the thread and explained “people think
that mines today are run like mines were run 20 years ago. And certainly mines
used to pollute a lot, but today I’m under even more strict regulations than other
industries. We have to live up to a whole set of regulations, the mining industry is
thoroughly regulated, I tell you; but of course I’m not doing any good for the
environment – I’m making a hole in a mountain!”. This, to Peter, was not exactly an
environmentalist thing to do; but, he said, the environmentalists are the same
people who keep buying laptops, cell phones and fancy wrist watches, the kind of
products that have gold and other metals in them. The challenge, to Peter, seemed
to be to accomplish the extraction with the least possible effect on the environment,
the good old pristine nature of which cooled the beer as we spoke.
When, on the day after the bar night, Peter was leaving for some meetings in
the capital Nuuk and in England, in an attempt to succeed in selling on the mine to
another company, he said goodbye to us by half-jokingly advising us to sum up our
fieldwork experience and what we had learnt about gold by, as he put it, “quoting
the manager: It is all magic”.
A decade or so after the Chernobyl disaster, extensive and diverse fungal growth
was detected on the inner walls of the power plant (Zhdanova et al. 2000). Apart
from mocking our ideas about viable places this also reminds us of the plain fact,
not particularly controversial, that all kinds of life are potentially connected to
destructive effects. As such wreckage and recovery could be seen as part of life
processes with all the death and decay these imply.
Even though these statements and processes of monitoring are very reassuring,
they might also be deceptive because of their particular and limited scope. Maybe
every drop of oil can be removed from the rocky ground of the valley, and maybe
all the machines, broken or not, might be re-sold to projects in Africa or just around
the fjord, where a new mining project might take off in the near future, and maybe
the barracks might serve the municipality to rent out to nature lovers who could
have a comfortable sweet home to camp in and from where to enjoy the stunning
nature of the area, as was suggested by the director.
But one might ask if the practices of wreckage and recovery can really be
properly explored on site? Do the collaborations – ruining or restoring – that we
found to be generative of Nalunaq gold not take us way beyond the particular site
of the mine where wreckage is seemingly under control? Upon every gold pour, the
gold is immediately sent to Switzerland for further refining, to then enter the global
gold market with fluctuating prices that have a very real impact on what goes on in
the mine – making it, among other things, into a business that is no longer
profitable. Employees fly around all of Europe to go home and come back home.
This is to say that although Kirkespirdalen is where Nalunaq is located, Nalunaq is
also lots of other places, potentially doing its bit of wreckage and recovery
elsewhere.
The analytical challenge, then, is not just to accept the coexistence of hellish
and homely features in one place, challenging as that may be, but also of extending
the object explored to other places where it also is. The object cannot be seen as
self-identical. Challenging though this is gold provides us with an illustration of the
fact that such lack of self-identity is valuable and indeed necessary. Pure gold, the
Nalunaq manager told us, can in fact only ever be 99,999 % pure. A little something
else is in even the purest of gold. If gold were 100 % pure, it would fall apart and
dissolve into liquid. In other words, something other than the thing also makes the
thing. In Nalunaq and beyond, then, objects come to be what they are because of
what they are not, calling for a collaborative approach.
REFERENCES
Zhdanova, N.N. 2000. Fungi from Chernobyl: Mycobiota of the inner regions of the
containment structure of the damaged nuclear reactor. Mycol Res. (104). Pp. 1421-
1426.